This is a novelty issue from the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of dozens of foreign-themed collector pieces the Banque Centrale du Congo licensed during the late 1990s — a period when the country, freshly renamed after Mobutu's fall, was generating hard currency through commemorative coin programs rather than economic stability. The coin has no connection to Dutch monetary history or any French-franc denomination system; the subject is purely decorative.
Willem I's original 5-franc pieces were struck at Utrecht beginning in 1826, when the Netherlands still governed Belgium.
This is a novelty issue from the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of dozens of foreign-themed collector pieces the Banque Centrale du Congo licensed during the late 1990s — a period when the country, freshly renamed after Mobutu's fall, was generating hard currency through commemorative coin programs rather than economic stability. The coin has no connection to Dutch monetary history or any French-franc denomination system; the subject is purely decorative.
Willem I's original 5-franc pieces were struck at Utrecht beginning in 1826, when the Netherlands still governed Belgium.