Switzerland's first federal coinage was authorized by the 1850 Federal Coinage Act, which finally unified a chaotic monetary system inherited from the dissolved Cantonal republic — one that had seen well over 300 distinct coin types circulating simultaneously across 25 cantons. The 10-rappen denomination was struck in billon rather than copper to distinguish it from the smaller 1 and 2 rappen pieces, though its silver content was low enough to make the distinction largely symbolic.
Production ran across the Paris and Strasbourg mints in the early years before settling at Bern. The extremely low fineness caused ongoing public skepticism about the coins' value, and by the 1860s worn examples were routinely refused in rural markets.
Switzerland's first federal coinage was authorized by the 1850 Federal Coinage Act, which finally unified a chaotic monetary system inherited from the dissolved Cantonal republic — one that had seen well over 300 distinct coin types circulating simultaneously across 25 cantons. The 10-rappen denomination was struck in billon rather than copper to distinguish it from the smaller 1 and 2 rappen pieces, though its silver content was low enough to make the distinction largely symbolic.
Production ran across the Paris and Strasbourg mints in the early years before settling at Bern. The extremely low fineness caused ongoing public skepticism about the coins' value, and by the 1860s worn examples were routinely refused in rural markets.