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Latin Monetary Union

The Latin Monetary Union (LMU) was a 19th-century system that unified several European currencies into a single currency that could be used in all member states when most national currencies were still made out of gold and silver. It was established in 1865 and disbanded in 1927. Many countries minted coins according to the LMU standard even though they did not formally accede to the LMU treaty.

History Edit

 
Overview of contractual states (red) and associated states (other colours) between 1866 and 1914.

Preliminary context Edit

The LMU adopted the specifications of the French gold franc, which had been introduced by Napoleon I in 1803 and was struck in denominations of 5, 10, 20, 40, 50 and 100 francs, with the 20 franc coin (6.45161 grams or 99.5636 grains of .900 fine gold struck on a 21-millimetre or 0.83-inch planchet) being the most common. In the French system the gold franc was interchangeable with the silver franc based on an exchange ratio of 1:15.5, which was the approximate relative value of the two metals at the time of the law of 1803.[1]

Initial treaty Edit

Exemplary standard of the LMU - France (1878)[2]
Denomination Composition Mass Diameter
1 centime Bronze 1 g 15 mm
2 centimes Bronze 2 g 20.2 mm
5 centimes Bronze 5 g 25 mm
10 centimes Bronze 10 g 30 mm
20 centimes Silver (.835) 1 g 16 mm
50 centimes Silver (.835) 2.5 g 18 mm
1 franc Silver (.835) 5 g 23 mm
2 francs Silver (.835) 10 g 27 mm
5 francs Silver (.900) 25 g 37 mm
10 francs Gold (.900) 3.2258 g 19 mm
20 francs Gold (.900) 6.45161 g 21 mm
50 francs Gold (.900) 16.12903 g 28 mm
100 francs Gold (.900) 32.25806 g 35 mm

By treaty dated 23 December 1865,[3] France, Belgium, Italy, and Switzerland formed the Latin Monetary Union. They agreed to a combined gold and silver standard (bimetalism) with a gold-to-silver ratio of 15.5 to 1 as established in the French Franc. One LMU Franc represented 4.5 grams (69 grains) of fine silver or 0.290322 grams (4.48035 grains) of fine gold.

The treaty required that all four contracting states strike freely exchangeable gold coins and silver coins according to common specifications. Before the treaty, for example, the fineness of the silver coins in the four states varied from 0.800 to 0.900. The treaty required that the largest silver coin of 5 francs be struck 0.900 fine and the fractional silver of 2 francs, 1 franc, 50 centimes and 20 centimes all be struck at 0.835 fine.[3] The agreement came into force on 1 August 1866.[4]

The LMU served the function of facilitating trade between different countries by setting the standards by which gold and silver currency could be minted and exchanged. In this manner a French trader could accept Italian lire for his goods with confidence that it could be converted back to a comparable amount of francs.

Further joining members Edit

Following the International Monetary Conference of 1867, the original four nations were joined by Greece on April 10, 1867.[5] Greece took advantage of a clause in the treaty that guaranteed admission of foreign states that agreed to abide by the treaty. Spain and Romania also considered joining. The discussions broke off unsuccessfully, but both countries nevertheless made an attempt to conform their currencies to the LMU standard.[5] Austria-Hungary refused to join the LMU because it rejected bimetallism, but signed a separate monetary treaty with France on December 24, 1867 whereby both states agreed to receive into their treasuries one another's gold coins at specified rates.[6] Austria-Hungary thereafter minted some but not all of its gold coins on the LMU standard, including the 4 and 8 florin, which matched the specifications of the French 10 and 20 francs.

Other states later adopted the system without formally joining the treaty: The colonies of France (including Algeria) came under the scope of the treaty in 1865; Peru adopted the franc system by law on July 31, 1863; Colombia and Venezuela followed in 1871; the Grand Duchy of Finland adopted the system on August 9, 1877; Serbia on November 11, 1878; and Bulgaria on May 17, 1880.[7] Coins struck for the Spanish territory of Puerto Rico in 1895 adhered to the standard, with one peso to five Spanish pesetas.[8] In 1904, the Danish West Indies were also placed on this standard but did not join the Union itself. When Albania emerged from the Ottoman Empire as an independent nation in 1912, coins of the Latin Monetary Union from France, Italy, Greece, and Austria-Hungary began to circulate in place of the Ottoman Lira. Albania did not however mint its own coins, or issue its own paper money until it adopted an independent monetary system in 1925.[9]

With the tacit agreement of Napoleon III of France, Giacomo Antonelli, the administrator of the Papal Treasury, embarked from 1866 on an ambitious increase in silver coinage without the prescribed amount of precious metal, equivalent to Belgium's total.[10][4] The papal coins quickly became debased and excessively circulated in other union states,[a] to the profit of the Holy See, but Swiss and French banks rejected papal coins and the Papal States were ejected from the Union in 1870, owing 20 million lire.[4]

Issues Edit

 
Belgium, 20 gold francs (90% fine)

Bimetalism failure Edit

From the beginning, fluctuations in the relative value of gold and silver on the world market stressed the currency union. This is today recognized as an inevitable effect of a currency based on bimetalism when precious metal prices fluctuate. When the LMU was formed in 1865, silver was nearing the end of a period of high valuation compared to gold.[11] In 1873 the value of silver dropped significantly, followed by a sharp increase in silver imports in the LMU countries, particularly in France and Belgium.[12] By 1873, the decreasing value of silver made it profitable to mint silver in exchange for gold at the Union's standard rate of 15.5 : 1. Indeed, in all of 1871 and 1872 the French mint had received just 5,000,000 francs of silver for conversion to coin,[citation needed] but in 1873 alone received 154,000,000 francs.[citation needed] Fearing an influx of silver coinage, the member nations of the Union agreed in Paris on January 30, 1874, to limit the free conversion of silver temporarily. By 1878, with no recovery in the silver price in sight, minting of silver coinage was suspended absolutely.[13] From 1873 onwards, the Union was on a de facto gold standard. The law still permitted payment in silver, but custom demanded and enforced payment in gold. The 5 franc silver pieces were "essentially upon the same footing as bank notes".[14]

More importantly, because new discoveries and better refining techniques increased the supply of silver, the fixed LMU exchange rate eventually overvalued silver relative to gold. German traders, in particular, were known to bring silver to LMU countries, have it minted into coinage then exchanged those for gold coins at the discounted exchange rate. These destabilizing tactics eventually forced the LMU to convert to a pure gold standard for its currency in 1878.[15][16]

Debasement of the coinage Edit

Some members, notably the Papal State, began to debase their currency.[when?] The Vatican minted Papal lira coins with an inadequate amount of silver (0.835 fine[17]) and then exchanged them for coins from other countries that had been minted correctly, thus in effect forcing other members of the Union to do the same.[citation needed] According to the BBC, Greece with its "chronically weak economy meant successive Greek governments responded by decreasing the amount of gold in their coins,[b] thereby debasing their currency in relation to those of other nations in the union and in violation of the original agreement". Greece was formally expelled from the Latin Monetary Union in 1908. It was readmitted in 1910, however.[19]

Paper money issues Edit

According to the Financial Times, another major problem of the LMU was that it failed to outlaw the printing of paper money based on the bimetallic currency. France and Italy exploited this weakness by printing banknotes to fund their own endeavours, effectively "forcing other members of the union to bear some of the cost of its fiscal extravagance by issuing notes backed by their currency".[20]

Effect of the Great War Edit

The political turbulence of the early twentieth century which culminated in the First World War brought the Latin Monetary Union to its final end in practice, even though it continued de jure until 1927, when it came to a formal end.[citation needed]

The last coins made according to the standards (i.e., diameter, weight and silver fineness) of the Union were the Swiss half, one-franc, and two-franc pieces of 1967.[21][c] However, Austria still mints gold 4 and 8 florin gold coins to the LMU specifications for collectors and investors, and modern gold rounds to LMU standards are also commercially minted.[22]

Impact Edit

A 2018 study in the European Review of Economic History found that the LMU had no significant effects on trade, except during the period 1865–1874.[23]

The Latin Monetary Union inspired the Scandinavian Monetary Union, established in 1873.[19]

Coins Edit

Below are examples of coins of 5 units silver coins:

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Not borne out by references in coin catalogues, e.g. Krause & Mishler, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 19th century, which shows LMU standard finenesses for Papal States silver and gold coinage with no debasement.
  2. ^ This assertion is not supported by the coinage record. Greece issued no silver or gold coins for circulation after 1884 (silver resumed in 1910), and all extant coins from the period in question (prior to 1884 and in 1910/11) are of LMU standard.[18]
  3. ^ The cupro-nickel 12, 1 and 2-franc coins made since 1968 were also still of LMU-standard weight and diameter, though no longer silver.

References Edit

  1. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 1. Retrieved 12 June 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ "Search the coin catalogue – Numista". en.numista.com. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  3. ^ a b Recueil des traités de la France (1864-1867) [Collection of the treaties of France (1864-1867)]. Vol. 9. pp. 453–458. from the original on 2020-11-22. Retrieved 2007-09-30.
  4. ^ a b c Pollard, John F. (2005). Money and the Rise of the Modern Papacy: Financing the Vatican, 1850–1950. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-521-81204-7. from the original on 2023-01-15. Retrieved 2020-11-15 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 81 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 83 – via Internet Archive.
  7. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 84 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ Yeoman, R. S. (2022). A guide book of United States coins. Mega red. Jeff Garrett, Kenneth E. Bressett, Q. David Bowers (8th ed.). Pelham, AL. pp. 1318–1319. ISBN 978-0-7948-4966-5. OCLC 1350926401.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2009-11-11.
  10. ^ Einaudi, Luca (2001). European Monetary Unification and the International Gold Standard (1865–1873). Oxford University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-19-924366-2.
  11. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 85–86 – via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 116 – via Internet Archive.
  13. ^ Laughlin, James Laurence (1898). "Chapter XI". The History of Bimetallism in the United States (PDF). D. Appleton and Co. ISBN 9781297448928. (PDF) from the original on 2022-01-20. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  14. ^ Willis, Henry Parker (1901). A History of the Latin Monetary Union: A Study in International Monetary Action. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 266 – via Internet Archive.
  15. ^ . goldcoin.org. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  16. ^ "5: Enthusiasm and Resistance to Union in Britain and Germany". (PDF). Oxford University Press. 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2007.
  17. ^ Pinchera, S (a cura di) (1957). Monete e zecche nello stato pontificio dalla restaurazione al 1870 [Coins and mints in the papal state from the restoration to 1870]. Archivio economico dell’unificazione italiana. Vol. V, fasc. 3. Roma.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (cited in Rossi, Marinella (2013). La borsa di Roma dal 1847 al 1860 [The Rome Stock Exchange from 1847 to 1860] (PDF) (Thesis) (in Italian). Tesionline. p. 1. (PDF) from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2022-10-15. (first degree thesis))
  18. ^ Krause & Mishler, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 19th-century & 20th-century volumes (annual publications)
  19. ^ a b "A Point of View: Making friends the shared currency way". BBC News. 2 March 2012. from the original on 19 December 2018. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  20. ^ "Eurozone: A nightmare scenario - Latin Lessons". Financial Times. 16 September 2011. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  21. ^ Krause & Mishler, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 20th century.
  22. ^ "Buy Swiss Gold from Echtgeld AG". www.echtgeld.ch. from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  23. ^ Timini, Jacopo (2018). "Currency unions and heterogeneous trade effects: the case of the Latin Monetary Union" (PDF). European Review of Economic History. 22 (3): 322–348. doi:10.1093/ereh/hex027.

Further reading Edit

  • Bae, Kee-Hong; Bailey, Warren (2011). "The Latin Monetary Union: Some Evidence on Europe's Failed Common Currency". Review of Development Finance. 1 (2): 131–149. doi:10.1016/j.rdf.2011.03.001.
  • Flandreau, Marc (2000). "The Economics and Politics of Monetary Unions: A Reassessment of the Latin Monetary Union, 1865–71". Financial History Review. 7 (1): 25–44. doi:10.1017/s0968565000000020. S2CID 154714928.
  • Redish, Angela (1993). "The Latin Monetary Union and the Emergence of the International Gold Standard". In Bordo, Michael D.; Capie, Forrest (eds.). Monetary Regimes in Transition. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 68–85. ISBN 978-0-521-41906-2.
  • Nenovsky, Nikolay; Jacques-Marie, Vaslin (2020). "Shadowing the Latin Monetary Union: Monetary regimes and interest rates in the Balkan periphery (1867-1912)". The Journal of European Economic History. 49 (2): 71–114. ISSN 2499-8281.

External links Edit

  • Grand-dad of today's Euro: The Latin Monetary Union (1865-1927)
  • Coins of the Latin Monetary Union: 1865 - 1926

latin, monetary, union, 20th, century, international, organization, romance, language, countries, latin, union, 19th, century, system, that, unified, several, european, currencies, into, single, currency, that, could, used, member, states, when, most, national. For the 20th century international organization of Romance language countries see Latin Union The Latin Monetary Union LMU was a 19th century system that unified several European currencies into a single currency that could be used in all member states when most national currencies were still made out of gold and silver It was established in 1865 and disbanded in 1927 Many countries minted coins according to the LMU standard even though they did not formally accede to the LMU treaty Contents 1 History 1 1 Preliminary context 1 2 Initial treaty 1 3 Further joining members 2 Issues 2 1 Bimetalism failure 2 2 Debasement of the coinage 2 3 Paper money issues 2 4 Effect of the Great War 3 Impact 4 Coins 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Overview of contractual states red and associated states other colours between 1866 and 1914 Preliminary context Edit The LMU adopted the specifications of the French gold franc which had been introduced by Napoleon I in 1803 and was struck in denominations of 5 10 20 40 50 and 100 francs with the 20 franc coin 6 45161 grams or 99 5636 grains of 900 fine gold struck on a 21 millimetre or 0 83 inch planchet being the most common In the French system the gold franc was interchangeable with the silver franc based on an exchange ratio of 1 15 5 which was the approximate relative value of the two metals at the time of the law of 1803 1 Initial treaty Edit Exemplary standard of the LMU France 1878 2 Denomination Composition Mass Diameter1 centime Bronze 1 g 15 mm2 centimes Bronze 2 g 20 2 mm5 centimes Bronze 5 g 25 mm10 centimes Bronze 10 g 30 mm20 centimes Silver 835 1 g 16 mm50 centimes Silver 835 2 5 g 18 mm1 franc Silver 835 5 g 23 mm2 francs Silver 835 10 g 27 mm5 francs Silver 900 25 g 37 mm10 francs Gold 900 3 2258 g 19 mm20 francs Gold 900 6 45161 g 21 mm50 francs Gold 900 16 12903 g 28 mm100 francs Gold 900 32 25806 g 35 mmBy treaty dated 23 December 1865 3 France Belgium Italy and Switzerland formed the Latin Monetary Union They agreed to a combined gold and silver standard bimetalism with a gold to silver ratio of 15 5 to 1 as established in the French Franc One LMU Franc represented 4 5 grams 69 grains of fine silver or 0 290322 grams 4 48035 grains of fine gold The treaty required that all four contracting states strike freely exchangeable gold coins and silver coins according to common specifications Before the treaty for example the fineness of the silver coins in the four states varied from 0 800 to 0 900 The treaty required that the largest silver coin of 5 francs be struck 0 900 fine and the fractional silver of 2 francs 1 franc 50 centimes and 20 centimes all be struck at 0 835 fine 3 The agreement came into force on 1 August 1866 4 The LMU served the function of facilitating trade between different countries by setting the standards by which gold and silver currency could be minted and exchanged In this manner a French trader could accept Italian lire for his goods with confidence that it could be converted back to a comparable amount of francs Further joining members Edit Following the International Monetary Conference of 1867 the original four nations were joined by Greece on April 10 1867 5 Greece took advantage of a clause in the treaty that guaranteed admission of foreign states that agreed to abide by the treaty Spain and Romania also considered joining The discussions broke off unsuccessfully but both countries nevertheless made an attempt to conform their currencies to the LMU standard 5 Austria Hungary refused to join the LMU because it rejected bimetallism but signed a separate monetary treaty with France on December 24 1867 whereby both states agreed to receive into their treasuries one another s gold coins at specified rates 6 Austria Hungary thereafter minted some but not all of its gold coins on the LMU standard including the 4 and 8 florin which matched the specifications of the French 10 and 20 francs Other states later adopted the system without formally joining the treaty The colonies of France including Algeria came under the scope of the treaty in 1865 Peru adopted the franc system by law on July 31 1863 Colombia and Venezuela followed in 1871 the Grand Duchy of Finland adopted the system on August 9 1877 Serbia on November 11 1878 and Bulgaria on May 17 1880 7 Coins struck for the Spanish territory of Puerto Rico in 1895 adhered to the standard with one peso to five Spanish pesetas 8 In 1904 the Danish West Indies were also placed on this standard but did not join the Union itself When Albania emerged from the Ottoman Empire as an independent nation in 1912 coins of the Latin Monetary Union from France Italy Greece and Austria Hungary began to circulate in place of the Ottoman Lira Albania did not however mint its own coins or issue its own paper money until it adopted an independent monetary system in 1925 9 With the tacit agreement of Napoleon III of France Giacomo Antonelli the administrator of the Papal Treasury embarked from 1866 on an ambitious increase in silver coinage without the prescribed amount of precious metal equivalent to Belgium s total 10 4 The papal coins quickly became debased and excessively circulated in other union states a to the profit of the Holy See but Swiss and French banks rejected papal coins and the Papal States were ejected from the Union in 1870 owing 20 million lire 4 Issues Edit nbsp Belgium 20 gold francs 90 fine This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Latin Monetary Union news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bimetalism failure Edit From the beginning fluctuations in the relative value of gold and silver on the world market stressed the currency union This is today recognized as an inevitable effect of a currency based on bimetalism when precious metal prices fluctuate When the LMU was formed in 1865 silver was nearing the end of a period of high valuation compared to gold 11 In 1873 the value of silver dropped significantly followed by a sharp increase in silver imports in the LMU countries particularly in France and Belgium 12 By 1873 the decreasing value of silver made it profitable to mint silver in exchange for gold at the Union s standard rate of 15 5 1 Indeed in all of 1871 and 1872 the French mint had received just 5 000 000 francs of silver for conversion to coin citation needed but in 1873 alone received 154 000 000 francs citation needed Fearing an influx of silver coinage the member nations of the Union agreed in Paris on January 30 1874 to limit the free conversion of silver temporarily By 1878 with no recovery in the silver price in sight minting of silver coinage was suspended absolutely 13 From 1873 onwards the Union was on a de facto gold standard The law still permitted payment in silver but custom demanded and enforced payment in gold The 5 franc silver pieces were essentially upon the same footing as bank notes 14 More importantly because new discoveries and better refining techniques increased the supply of silver the fixed LMU exchange rate eventually overvalued silver relative to gold German traders in particular were known to bring silver to LMU countries have it minted into coinage then exchanged those for gold coins at the discounted exchange rate These destabilizing tactics eventually forced the LMU to convert to a pure gold standard for its currency in 1878 15 16 Debasement of the coinage Edit Some members notably the Papal State began to debase their currency when The Vatican minted Papal lira coins with an inadequate amount of silver 0 835 fine 17 and then exchanged them for coins from other countries that had been minted correctly thus in effect forcing other members of the Union to do the same citation needed According to the BBC Greece with its chronically weak economy meant successive Greek governments responded by decreasing the amount of gold in their coins b thereby debasing their currency in relation to those of other nations in the union and in violation of the original agreement Greece was formally expelled from the Latin Monetary Union in 1908 It was readmitted in 1910 however 19 Paper money issues Edit According to the Financial Times another major problem of the LMU was that it failed to outlaw the printing of paper money based on the bimetallic currency France and Italy exploited this weakness by printing banknotes to fund their own endeavours effectively forcing other members of the union to bear some of the cost of its fiscal extravagance by issuing notes backed by their currency 20 Effect of the Great War Edit The political turbulence of the early twentieth century which culminated in the First World War brought the Latin Monetary Union to its final end in practice even though it continued de jure until 1927 when it came to a formal end citation needed The last coins made according to the standards i e diameter weight and silver fineness of the Union were the Swiss half one franc and two franc pieces of 1967 21 c However Austria still mints gold 4 and 8 florin gold coins to the LMU specifications for collectors and investors and modern gold rounds to LMU standards are also commercially minted 22 Impact EditA 2018 study in the European Review of Economic History found that the LMU had no significant effects on trade except during the period 1865 1874 23 The Latin Monetary Union inspired the Scandinavian Monetary Union established in 1873 19 Coins EditBelow are examples of coins of 5 units silver coins 5 Greek drachmae 1876 nbsp nbsp George I of Greece Coat of arms of Greece5 Belgian francs 1868 nbsp nbsp Leopold II of Belgium Coat of arms of Belgium5 French francs 1868 nbsp nbsp Napoleon III of France Coat of arms of the Second Empire5 Italian lire 1874 nbsp nbsp Victor Emmanuel II of Italy Coat of arms of the House of Savoy5 Spanish pesetas 1885 nbsp nbsp Alfonso XII of Spain Coat of arms of Spain5 Venezuelan bolivares 1912 nbsp nbsp Simon Bolivar Coat of arms of Venezuela5 Swiss Francs 1889 nbsp Coat of arms of Switzerland Libertas5 Romanian lei 1883 nbsp Carol I of Romania Coat of arms of RomaniaSee also EditBimetallism Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union Euro Latin Union Spanish peseta Stella United States coin Notes Edit Not borne out by references in coin catalogues e g Krause amp Mishler Standard Catalog of World Coins 19th century which shows LMU standard finenesses for Papal States silver and gold coinage with no debasement This assertion is not supported by the coinage record Greece issued no silver or gold coins for circulation after 1884 silver resumed in 1910 and all extant coins from the period in question prior to 1884 and in 1910 11 are of LMU standard 18 The cupro nickel 1 2 1 and 2 franc coins made since 1968 were also still of LMU standard weight and diameter though no longer silver References Edit Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 1 Retrieved 12 June 2018 via Internet Archive Search the coin catalogue Numista en numista com Retrieved 2023 03 12 a b Recueil des traites de la France 1864 1867 Collection of the treaties of France 1864 1867 Vol 9 pp 453 458 Archived from the original on 2020 11 22 Retrieved 2007 09 30 a b c Pollard John F 2005 Money and the Rise of the Modern Papacy Financing the Vatican 1850 1950 New York Cambridge University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 521 81204 7 Archived from the original on 2023 01 15 Retrieved 2020 11 15 via Google Books a b Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 81 via Internet Archive Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 83 via Internet Archive Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 84 via Internet Archive Yeoman R S 2022 A guide book of United States coins Mega red Jeff Garrett Kenneth E Bressett Q David Bowers 8th ed Pelham AL pp 1318 1319 ISBN 978 0 7948 4966 5 OCLC 1350926401 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Daggar Jon s Coin and Currency Archived from the original on 2015 01 20 Retrieved 2009 11 11 Einaudi Luca 2001 European Monetary Unification and the International Gold Standard 1865 1873 Oxford University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 19 924366 2 Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 85 86 via Internet Archive Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 116 via Internet Archive Laughlin James Laurence 1898 Chapter XI The History of Bimetallism in the United States PDF D Appleton and Co ISBN 9781297448928 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 01 20 Retrieved 2020 11 21 Willis Henry Parker 1901 A History of the Latin Monetary Union A Study in International Monetary Action Chicago University of Chicago Press p 266 via Internet Archive The Latin Monetary Union goldcoin org Archived from the original on 4 March 2014 Retrieved 2 February 2012 5 Enthusiasm and Resistance to Union in Britain and Germany European Monetary Unification and the International Gold Standard 1865 1873 PDF Oxford University Press 2001 Archived from the original PDF on 8 August 2007 Pinchera S a cura di 1957 Monete e zecche nello stato pontificio dalla restaurazione al 1870 Coins and mints in the papal state from the restoration to 1870 Archivio economico dell unificazione italiana Vol V fasc 3 Roma a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link cited in Rossi Marinella 2013 La borsa di Roma dal 1847 al 1860 The Rome Stock Exchange from 1847 to 1860 PDF Thesis in Italian Tesionline p 1 Archived PDF from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2022 10 15 first degree thesis Krause amp Mishler Standard Catalog of World Coins 19th century amp 20th century volumes annual publications a b A Point of View Making friends the shared currency way BBC News 2 March 2012 Archived from the original on 19 December 2018 Retrieved 26 February 2012 Eurozone A nightmare scenario Latin Lessons Financial Times 16 September 2011 Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Krause amp Mishler Standard Catalog of World Coins 20th century Buy Swiss Gold from Echtgeld AG www echtgeld ch Archived from the original on 28 August 2016 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Timini Jacopo 2018 Currency unions and heterogeneous trade effects the case of the Latin Monetary Union PDF European Review of Economic History 22 3 322 348 doi 10 1093 ereh hex027 Further reading EditBae Kee Hong Bailey Warren 2011 The Latin Monetary Union Some Evidence on Europe s Failed Common Currency Review of Development Finance 1 2 131 149 doi 10 1016 j rdf 2011 03 001 Flandreau Marc 2000 The Economics and Politics of Monetary Unions A Reassessment of the Latin Monetary Union 1865 71 Financial History Review 7 1 25 44 doi 10 1017 s0968565000000020 S2CID 154714928 Redish Angela 1993 The Latin Monetary Union and the Emergence of the International Gold Standard In Bordo Michael D Capie Forrest eds Monetary Regimes in Transition New York Cambridge University Press pp 68 85 ISBN 978 0 521 41906 2 Nenovsky Nikolay Jacques Marie Vaslin 2020 Shadowing the Latin Monetary Union Monetary regimes and interest rates in the Balkan periphery 1867 1912 The Journal of European Economic History 49 2 71 114 ISSN 2499 8281 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Latin Monetary Union Grand dad of today s Euro The Latin Monetary Union 1865 1927 Coins of the Latin Monetary Union 1865 1926 Portal nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Latin Monetary Union amp oldid 1157955141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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