Everything about The Latin Monetary Union totally explained
The
Latin Monetary Union (
LMU) was a
19th century attempt to
unify several
European
currencies into a
single currency that could be used in all the member states, at a time when most national currencies were still made out of
gold and
silver. It was established in
1865 and disbanded in
1927.
History
By a convention dated
23 December 1865,
France,
Belgium,
Italy, and
Switzerland formed the union and agreed to change their national currencies to a standard of 4.5
grams of silver or 0.290322 grams of gold (a
ratio of 15.5 to 1) and make them freely interchangeable. The agreement came into force on
1 August 1866. They were joined later by
Spain and
Greece in
1868, and
Romania,
Austria-Hungary,
Bulgaria,
Venezuela,
Serbia,
Montenegro,
San Marino and the
Papal States in
1889. In
1904 the
Danish West Indies were also placed on this standard, but didn't join the LMU itself.
Giacomo Cardinal Antonelli, the administrator of the Papal Treasury, with the tacit agreement of
Napoleon III of France, embarked on an ambitious increase in
silver coinage without the prescribed amount of metal. The papal coins quickly became debased and excessively circulated in other union states, to the profit of the Holy See, but eventually Swiss and French banks rejected papal coins and the Papal States were ejected from the Union. From 1873 onwards, the union was on a
de facto gold standard.
Due to the fluctuations of gold and silver and the political turbulences of the early
20th century, the monetary union faded away in the
1920s though wasn't until 1927 that the union came to a formal end.
The last coins made according to the LMU standards are the Swiss 50 Cts, 1 Fr. & 2 Fr. in 1967.
Non-members
United Kingdom
An interesting parallel can be seen between the discussions in the
United Kingdom concerning the possibility of Britain joining the Latin Monetary Union, and the current discussions concerning British membership of the
euro.
The proposal involved reducing the amount of gold in one
pound sterling by less than 1% to make one pound equivalent to 25 Francs and also
decimalising the currency.
United States
The
United States made several steps that could have prepared the country for joining the Latin Monetary Union, but never did so. Its
gold coinage was already within four percent of the LMU standard at the rate of 5 LMU francs per U.S. dollar. The
Mint Act of 1873 increased the mass of the dime, quarter dollar, and half dollar slightly to 25 grams of .900 fine silver per dollar, putting them on the LMU standard, a standard that was maintained until the minting of U.S. silver coins was halted in
1965.
1875 saw the introduction of the
20¢ piece which contained 5 grams of .900 fine silver, the same standards as one franc. In addition, the
United States Mint produced
pattern coins called
Stellas in
1879 and
1880 that would be worth 4
U.S. dollars or 20
French francs. However, as close as it came, the United States never joined, decided not to resize its gold coins, repealed the legislation authorizing the
20¢ piece after only three years, and kept its large silver dollar which was minted using a 16 to 1 ratio for silver to gold.
Coins
Belows are examples of coins of 5 units.
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