Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1818–1829
Issuer: Sweden Issuer flag
Currency:
(1798—1830)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 74,327
Material
Diameter: 21.5 mm
Weight: 3.48 g
Gold weight: 3.40 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 97.6% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard594
Numista: #37686
Value
Bullion value: $566.30

Obverse

Description:
King Karl XIV facing right, legend around rim.
Inscription:
CARL XIV SVERIGES NORR·G·OCH V·K·
Translation:
CARL XIV OF SWEDEN, NORWAY, AND THE WENDES
Script: Latin
Language: Swedish

Reverse

Description:
Shield with Sweden’s Three Crowns inside the Seraphim Order chain. The pendant divides the date and mintmark, flanked by the king’s motto.
Inscription:
FOLKETS KÄRLEK MIN BELÖNING

C. B.

18 27
Translation:
The People's Love My Reward

C. B.

18 27
Script: Latin
Language: Swedish

Edge

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1818OL6,389
1819OL1,828
1820LB7,248
1821LB19,491
1822CB5,222
1823CB3,155
1824CB3,370
1825CB8,127
1826CB4,126
1827CB4,579
1828CB5,150
1829CB5,642

Historical background

In 1818, Sweden was navigating a complex and challenging currency situation, largely a legacy of the Napoleonic Wars. To finance its military involvement, the state had heavily relied on issuing inconvertible paper money known as Riksgäldssedlar from the National Debt Office (Riksgäldskontoret). This led to a severe depreciation of the paper currency against silver, creating a system of two parallel currencies: the silver riksdaler and the much less valuable paper riksdaler. By 1818, the paper money had lost approximately three-quarters of its face value in silver, causing inflation, economic uncertainty, and hindering both domestic and international trade.

The response to this crisis was the landmark Currency Act of 1834, but its foundation was laid in 1818. In that year, the influential economist and politician Johan Gustaf Richert presented a seminal report to the Riksdag of the Estates, which would guide future policy. Richert's report definitively established that the silver riksdaler was the legitimate and fundamental unit of account, rejecting proposals to devalue the currency's metal standard. His principle was that the paper debt must eventually be redeemed at its full face value in silver, a commitment aimed at restoring state creditworthiness, though it promised a difficult and deflationary path ahead.

Therefore, 1818 represents a pivotal turning point, marking the end of ad-hoc wartime finance and the beginning of a deliberate, if arduous, journey toward monetary stability. The political decision to honour the pre-war silver standard, despite the immense short-term cost, set Sweden on a course of deflationary austerity that would last for decades. The actual implementation, including the formal decision to redeem paper money at a discounted rate and the eventual return to convertibility, would unfold in the subsequent years, culminating in the laws of the 1830s that finally resolved the "money question."
Legendary