Napoleon restructured the French monetary system root and branch with the Germinal franc of 1803, fixing the 5-franc piece as the anchor of a bimetallic system that would outlast his own reign by decades. The 1807–1808 dating places this coin squarely in the imperial consolidation period, after Austerlitz and before the Peninsula War began bleeding French resources.
The Monnaie de Paris struck these across multiple branch mints during this window, each identified by a mint letter whose presence or absence materially affects relative scarcity. The Paris "A" mint issues are the most common; Bayonne and Utrecht productions from the same years run considerably scarcer.
Napoleon restructured the French monetary system root and branch with the Germinal franc of 1803, fixing the 5-franc piece as the anchor of a bimetallic system that would outlast his own reign by decades. The 1807–1808 dating places this coin squarely in the imperial consolidation period, after Austerlitz and before the Peninsula War began bleeding French resources.
The Monnaie de Paris struck these across multiple branch mints during this window, each identified by a mint letter whose presence or absence materially affects relative scarcity. The Paris "A" mint issues are the most common; Bayonne and Utrecht productions from the same years run considerably scarcer.