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5 Francs - Alexandre Berthier Pattern

Issuer Principality of Neuchâtel
Year 1813
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Value 5 Francs
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Reverse description Central field displays the denomination 5 / FRANCS. in two lines, enclosed within a laurel and olive wreath tied at the base with a ribbon bow. Above the wreath, a princely crown with fleurs-de-lis and arches surmounts the composition. The date 181. appears in the exergue below the wreath, with the final digit intentionally incomplete, a characteristic of this pattern. The circumferential legend PRINCIPAUTE DE NEUCHATEL runs around the upper periphery of the coin.
Reverse script Latin
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Additional information

Neuchâtel's status as a Napoleonic principality — gifted by the Emperor to his Chief of Staff Alexandre Berthier in 1806 — made it a geopolitical oddity: a Swiss canton governed by a French marshal who never once visited it. This 1813 pattern was produced on the eve of Napoleon's collapse, and no regular coinage in this type ever entered circulation. The copper-plated tin composition marks it unambiguously as a presentation or trial piece rather than a production prototype.

The Richt reference suffix "Fälschung" — German for forgery — flags that this piece exists in a documented false variant, a distinction worth tracking against the HMZ attribution before purchase.

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