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1915 French Silver 50 Cents

Obverse
Reverse
Item Notes
General
Type: French Silver 50 Cents 
Years: 1897 - 1920  Cat. Num.: KM# 854 
Country: France  Period: Modern Republic 
Currency: French Franc  Face value: 50 Cents 
System: Decimal  100 Centimes = 1 Franc 
Desgr/Engr: Louis Oscar Roty 
Obverse: Figure sowing seeds 
Legend: REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE 
Reverse: Leafy branch divides date and denomination 
Legend: 50 CENTIMS LIBERTE·EGALITE·FRATERNITE 
Edge: Reeded 
Purpose: Circulation 
Issue
Year:
1915
Mint:  
Mintage: 20,893,000 
Scarcity:
Valuation:
 
Notes:  
Grades & Prices Available
(EF) Sold
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Specifications
Composition: Silver 
Fineness: 0.8350 
Content: 2.09g
  (0.07 Oz)
Bullion Value: $1.56 
Total Weight: 2.5000g 
  (0.08 Oz)
Alignment:
Coin 
 
Diameter: 18.00mm 
Thickness:  
Description

The decimal "franc" was established as the national currency by the French Revolutionary Convention in 1795 as a decimal unit (1 franc = 10 decimes = 100 centimes) of 4.5 g of fine silver. This was slightly less than the livre of 4.505 g but the franc was set in 1796 at 1.0125 livres (1 livre, 3 deniers), reflecting in part the past minting of sub-standard coins.

In 1803, the "germinal franc" (named after the month Germinal in the revolutionary calendar) was established, creating a gold franc containing 290.32 mg of fine gold. From this point, gold and silver-based units circulated interchangeably on the basis of a 1:15.5 ratio between the values of the two metals (bimetallism). This system continued until 1864, when all silver coins except the 5 franc piece were debased from 90% to 83.5% silver without the weights changing.

France was a founding member of the Latin Monetary Union (LMU) in 1865. The common currency was based on the franc germinal, with the name franc already being used in Switzerland and Belgium, whilst other countries used their own names for the currency. In 1873, the LMU went over to a purely gold standard of 1 franc = 0.290322581 g gold.

The outbreak of World War I caused France to leave the gold standard of the LMU. The war severely undermined the franc's strength, as war expenditure, inflation and postwar reconstruction, financed partly through the printing of ever more money, reduced the franc's purchasing power by 70% from 1915 to 1920 and a further 43% from 1922 to 1926. After a brief return to the gold standard (1928 to 1936) the currency was allowed to resume its slide, until it was worth in 1959 less than a fortieth of its 1934 value.

The third coins were issued in denominations of 1 and 5 centimes, 1 and 2 decimes (in copper), quarter, half, 1, 2, and 5 francs (in silver), and 20 and 40 francs (in gold). Copper coins were not issued between 1801 and 1848, leaving the quarter-franc as the smallest coin being minted. During this period, copper coins from the previous currency system circulated, with a one-sou coin being valued at 5 centimes.

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