France 1710-A 1/2 ecu

From CoinVarieties
Jump to navigation Jump to search
from the Mountain Groan Collection
France 1710A demi ecu rev DSLR.jpg

The specimen shown is an demi-écu aux trois couronnes ("half écu with three crowns") struck in Paris during the reign of Louis XIV. This type was struck 1709-15 in large quantities, and is the last half écu to bear the bust of Louis XIV of France. It was succeeded by the demi-écu vertugadin of Louis XV. Droulers[1] prices this date as common.

Recorded mintage: 6,028,258.

Specification: 15.30 g, 0.917 fine silver, 32-35 mm diameter, edge lettered DOMINE SALVUM FAC REGEM, designed by Joseph Roëttiers.

Catalog reference: Dupl-1569; Gad-199, Dr/4 № 632, Dr/2 № 452, KM 382.1.

Source:

  • [1]Droulers, Frédéric, Répertoire General des Monnaies de Louis XIII à Louis XVI (1610-1792), 4e édition. Paris: AFPN, 2009.
  • Duplessy, Jean, Les Monnaies Françaises Royales de Hugues Capet à Louis XVI (987-1793), Tome II, 2e édition, Paris: Maison Platt, 1999.
  • Gadoury, Victor, Monnaies Royales Françaises, 1610-1792, 5me éd., Monaco: Éditions Victor Gadoury, 2018.
  • Michael, Thomas, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1701-1800, 7th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2016.

Links to: