Part of the Monnaie de Paris' long-running "Régions de France" series, this issue is one of several dozen released across multiple years to cover each administrative region — a program driven as much by collector revenue as by regional pride. The .500 fineness is deliberately below sterling, a cost-conscious choice that kept the series accessible while still qualifying as silver bullion.
Languedoc-Roussillon's entry appeared the same year France began its contentious regional redistricting debates, which would eventually abolish the region entirely in 2016 when it was merged into the new administrative zone of Occitanie.
Part of the Monnaie de Paris' long-running "Régions de France" series, this issue is one of several dozen released across multiple years to cover each administrative region — a program driven as much by collector revenue as by regional pride. The .500 fineness is deliberately below sterling, a cost-conscious choice that kept the series accessible while still qualifying as silver bullion.
Languedoc-Roussillon's entry appeared the same year France began its contentious regional redistricting debates, which would eventually abolish the region entirely in 2016 when it was merged into the new administrative zone of Occitanie.