FRENCH COINS  Monarchial  


L' Ancien Regeime

Why collect French coins? France has one of the most varied and interesting coinages perhaps comparable only to Roman (but a lot cheaper). Large silver dollars (ecus) span from the Monarchy of Louis 13th, to Revolution: Convention and Directory, the Napoleonic era, back to Monarchy, 2nd Republic, Empire again and yet back to Republic.

click on the coin image for a larger view that includes the obverse & reverse

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Coin Pix Coin comments Historical comments


Henri III, silver 1 franc 1585 nice ef



a contemporary of Elizabeth I of England. France was pivotal to Spain's plan to invade England and so Philip II tried to use the Catholic League ? to overthrow Henri III and set up a Catholic government allied to him.


Louis XIV, the Sun King demi-ecu (half-ecu) 1647 ch. almost uncirculated
(Jim Elmond, World Wide Coins; Auction 2004)


 

An early portrait of Louis 14th on a half-ecu.

Louis 13th was the first one to start the French ecu (silver dollar) in 1642? but he died 2 years later. I have no coins of Louis 13th.

Louis 14th the Sun King tried to take over Europe during his very long reign. While sucessful early on much of his territorial aquisitions were lost after the battle of (XXXXX).  Still he made France one of the major powers in Europe. His ecus are much cheaper but uncs are still a little tough to find.



Louis XIV, the Sun King demi-ecu (half-ecu) 1693-A ms (NGC-63)

Even though this one is slabbed 63 it doesn't compare with the raw demi-ecu bought from J. Elmond's World Wide coin auction.

Maybe that's why Jim's stuff never sells cheaply?


A much later portrait of the long-lived Louis-14th, perhaps France's greatest King.


Louis XV, 2 Louis d'or 1758-BB
Heritage Signature World Coin Auction, Sept., 2007, photo by Heritage

Louis XV, Bandeau Head
Double Louis D'Or
1758-BB (= Strasbourg mint) NGC-62





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