The Democratic Republic of Vietnam proclaimed independence on September 2, 1945, the same day Japan formally surrendered — leaving Ho Chi Minh's government in the extraordinary position of issuing currency before the French had fully registered what had happened. These aluminum pieces were struck under acute material constraints; aluminum was among the few metals accessible to the new administration, and the lightweight coinage that resulted was partly a practical compromise and partly a political statement of autonomous governance. French forces returned in force by early 1946, pushing the DRV into the northern highlands and rendering this first coinage politically obsolete within months of issue.
The Democratic Republic of Vietnam proclaimed independence on September 2, 1945, the same day Japan formally surrendered — leaving Ho Chi Minh's government in the extraordinary position of issuing currency before the French had fully registered what had happened. These aluminum pieces were struck under acute material constraints; aluminum was among the few metals accessible to the new administration, and the lightweight coinage that resulted was partly a practical compromise and partly a political statement of autonomous governance. French forces returned in force by early 1946, pushing the DRV into the northern highlands and rendering this first coinage politically obsolete within months of issue.