Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Auktionen Frühwald
Context
Years: 1872–1875
Country: Austria Country flag
Currency:
(1857—1892)
Demonetization: 31 May 1893
Total mintage: 172,388
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 5.35 g
Silver weight: 2.78 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 52% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2217
Numista: #33518
Value
Bullion value: $7.81

Obverse

Description:
Franz Joseph portrait facing right. Circular legend.
Inscription:
FRANC IOS I D G AVSTRIAE IMPERATOR

A
Translation:
Francis I, by the Grace of God, Emperor of Austria
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Imperial double-headed eagle with Habsburg-Lorraine and Austrian arms. Legend: "Hungariae, Bohemiae, Galiciae, Lodomeriae, Illyriae, Rex, Archidux Austriae."
Inscription:
HVNGAR BOHEM GAL 1/4 FL LOD ILL REX A A date
Translation:
Hungary, Bohemia, Galicia, 1/4 Florin, Lodovicus Imperator, King of All, Archduke of Austria
Script: Latin
Languages: Hungarian, Latin, German

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1872104,364
187348,016
1874
187520,008

Historical background

By 1872, the Austrian Empire was in the final stages of a complex monetary transition, navigating the legacy of its chronic fiscal instability. For decades, the Empire had relied on a forced paper currency, the Austrian Gulden (Florin), which was not convertible to silver and had fluctuated in value since its introduction during the Napoleonic Wars. This period of "finance gulden" created uncertainty for both domestic commerce and international trade, as its value was often discounted against stable silver currencies like the Prussian Thaler. The state's substantial debt and history of deficit financing, particularly following the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, made the establishment of a sound, metallic currency a persistent but elusive goal.

The pivotal shift began with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which created the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. A key economic component of this new structure was the commitment to monetary union and reform. This led to the Currency Law of 1892, but the groundwork was laid in the preceding decades. In 1867, the Gulden was placed on a de facto silver standard, and by 1872, the government was actively working to stabilize the currency and prepare for the eventual introduction of a new gold-based unit, the Krone. The immediate goal was to end the era of inconvertible paper and establish a fixed parity with silver, thereby integrating the Empire's economy more securely into European financial markets.

Thus, the currency situation in 1872 was one of cautious transition. The Austrian Gulden remained the official unit, but it was now operating under a legislated silver standard, with the authorities accumulating metallic reserves and aiming for full convertibility. The process was slow and fraught with the challenges of managing a large public debt, but the direction was clear: away from discretionary paper money and toward a fixed, metallic standard shared with Hungary. This period set the essential administrative and financial stage for the comprehensive currency reform that would culminate two decades later with the full adoption of the gold-based Krone.

Series: 1872 Austrian Empire circulation coins

¼ Florin obverse
¼ Florin reverse
¼ Florin
1872-1875
1 Florin obverse
1 Florin reverse
1 Florin
1872-1892
2 Florins obverse
2 Florins reverse
2 Florins
1872-1892
1 Ducat obverse
1 Ducat reverse
1 Ducat
1872-1915
4 Ducats obverse
4 Ducats reverse
4 Ducats
1872-1915
💎 Extremely Rare