Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Uppsala Universitet, CC0
Context
Years: 1898–1920
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
(1870—1940)
Currency:
(1795—1959)
Demonetization: 25 June 1928
Total mintage: 434,871,373
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 5 g
Silver weight: 4.17 g
Thickness: 1.4 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 83.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard844
Numista: #682
Value
Bullion value: $11.91

Obverse

Description:
The Sower, a French national emblem designed by Oscar Roty in 1900.
Inscription:
REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE

O. Roty
Translation:
French Republic

O. Roty
Script: Latin
Language: French

Reverse

Description:
Beneath the face value, an olive branch encircles the French motto.
Inscription:
LIBERTE·EGALITE·FRATERNITE

1

FRANC

1915
Translation:
LIBERTY EQUALITY FRATERNITY

1

FRANC

1915
Script: Latin
Language: French

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbol> Allegory


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
189815,000,000
1898Matte
189911,000,000
190099,097
1900Matte
19016,200,000
19026,000,000
1903472,883
19047,000,000
19056,003,526
19061,908,100
19072,562,745
19083,691,222
190910,923,790
19107,725,318
19115,542,000
191210,001,000
191313,654,148
191414,361,102
1914C43,421
191547,955,158
191692,029,179
191757,153,034
191850,112,330
191946,111,525
192019,321,795

Historical background

In 1898, France operated under the Latin Monetary Union (LMU), a multinational bimetallic system it had spearheaded in 1865. The franc was defined by a fixed ratio of gold to silver (1:15.5), meaning both metals could be minted into legal tender coins. However, this system was under severe strain. A global surge in silver production following major discoveries had depressed its market value, causing the fixed LMU ratio to become misaligned with reality. Consequently, cheaper silver flooded the Union, while gold coins were increasingly hoarded or exported (Gresham's Law in action), threatening the gold reserves seen as the bedrock of financial stability.

Domestically, France was on a de facto gold standard. To protect its gold stock, the Bank of France had, since 1878, suspended the free minting of silver for private individuals—a policy known as "limping bimetallism." While existing silver coins remained legal tender, new ones were minted only for government account. This created a complex circulation: gold coins (20 and 100 franc pieces), full-bodied silver francs, and fractional subsidiary coins. The situation was a political and economic tightrope, with debtors and silver interests advocating for the full restoration of bimetallism to create inflationary relief, while creditors, financiers, and the Bank of France staunchly defended the gold standard as essential for France's prestige and stability.

Internationally, the currency question was intertwined with geopolitical rivalry. The prospect of Germany demonetizing silver and the United States' debate over "free silver" influenced French policy. By 1898, the Third Republic was firmly, if unofficially, committed to maintaining the gold standard, viewing it as crucial for its position as a global financial center and a leading creditor nation. The year thus represented a tense equilibrium within a failing multinational system, setting the stage for France's eventual formal adoption of the gold standard in the years following the turn of the century.

Series: 1 franc semeuse

1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
1898-1920
1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
1960-2001
1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
2000-2001
🌱 Very Common