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obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1857–1865
Country: Austria Country flag
Currency:
(1857—1892)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 104,788,752
Material
Diameter: 29 mm
Weight: 12.34 g
Silver weight: 11.11 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2219
Numista: #7004
Value
Bullion value: $32.21

Obverse

Description:
Franz Joseph I, right-facing bust.
Inscription:
FRANC·IOS·I·D·G·AUSTRIAE IMPERATOR

A
Translation:
FRANCIS I, BY THE GRACE OF GOD, EMPEROR OF AUSTRIA
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Imperial eagle.
Inscription:
HVNG·BOH·LOMB·ET VEN· 1FL GAL·LOD·ILL·REX A·A· date
Script: Latin
Engraver: Franz Gaul

Edge

Plain with incuse letters and symbols
Legend:
* +>-*-<+ VIRIBVS +>-*-<+ * +>-*-<+ VNITIS +>-*-<+

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1857B
1857E
1857V
1857A
1858A15,571,025
1858E340,744
1858M1,331,827
1858V2,009,293
1858B1,919,699
1859E803,016
1859A18,101,091
1859B7,537,205
1859M3,467,307
1859V1,932,835
1860A21,628,438
1860B1,883,155
1860E864,967
1860V360,559
1861A12,966,333
1861B815,145
1861E590,676
1861V286,243
1862A3,922,597
1862B314,381
1862E100,973
1862V472,409
1863A3,464,685
1863B287,000
1863E133,997
1863V390,472
1864A872,325
1864B339,538
1864E150,125
1864V102,983
1865A1,339,330
1865B291,139
1865E166,144
1865V31,096

Historical background

In 1857, the Austrian Empire was grappling with a severe currency crisis that exposed the deep structural weaknesses of its monetary system. The empire operated on a complex and unstable dual system of paper and silver. The official currency was the silver Conventionsthaler, but the government, chronically short of funds due to military expenditures and debt, heavily relied on paper banknotes (Bancozettel) issued by the privileged Austrian National Bank. These notes were not fully convertible to silver, leading to frequent depreciation and a wide, fluctuating gap between their face value and their actual metallic worth. This created chronic uncertainty in both domestic commerce and international trade.

The immediate trigger for the 1857 crisis was the global financial panic that originated in the United States and spread rapidly across Europe. As international credit contracted, confidence in the already-suspect Austrian paper currency evaporated. A wave of withdrawals and a rush to convert paper into precious metal ensued, severely straining the reserves of the Austrian National Bank. The crisis was acutely felt in the empire's commercial centers, particularly Vienna, where numerous businesses and private banks faced insolvency, revealing the fragility of the financial sector.

The 1857 panic forced the Habsburg government to confront the unsustainable monetary situation directly. It culminated in the Imperial Patent of September 1858, which attempted a fundamental reform. This decree officially severed the link between paper money and silver, making the paper Gulden (the Vereinswährung) the sole legal tender for most domestic transactions, while mandating that international obligations be settled in silver (Valutawährung). This effectively created a forced paper currency and acknowledged the state's inability to guarantee convertibility, setting the stage for the more unified monetary reforms that would follow the 1867 Austro-Hungarian Compromise.

Series: 1857 Austrian Empire circulation coins

¼ Florin obverse
¼ Florin reverse
¼ Florin
1857-1859
1 Florin obverse
1 Florin reverse
1 Florin
1857-1865
1 Thaler obverse
1 Thaler reverse
1 Thaler
1857-1865
🌱 Common