Muhammad VIII al-Amin was installed as Bey of Tunis by the French Residency in 1943, partly in response to the brief Axis occupation of Tunisia and the political complications it created with the incumbent Ahmed II. These zinc issues were a wartime expedient — France's metal supplies were strangled, and zinc had replaced copper-nickel across French colonial coinage during the occupation years. The Monnaie de Paris continued striking them into 1945 even as the war ended, filling a circulation void that better alloys couldn't yet address.
Zinc corrodes aggressively in humid Mediterranean conditions, and Tunisian examples typically show more surface deterioration than comparable French metropolitan issues of the same period.
Muhammad VIII al-Amin was installed as Bey of Tunis by the French Residency in 1943, partly in response to the brief Axis occupation of Tunisia and the political complications it created with the incumbent Ahmed II. These zinc issues were a wartime expedient — France's metal supplies were strangled, and zinc had replaced copper-nickel across French colonial coinage during the occupation years. The Monnaie de Paris continued striking them into 1945 even as the war ended, filling a circulation void that better alloys couldn't yet address.
Zinc corrodes aggressively in humid Mediterranean conditions, and Tunisian examples typically show more surface deterioration than comparable French metropolitan issues of the same period.