Piedforts — struck at double or greater thickness on standard planchet dies — were never intended for circulation. The Banque d'État du Maroc commissioned these essais during the mid-1920s as formal presentation pieces, submitted to French colonial authorities and treasury officials for design and alloy approval before any production run was authorized. The aluminium bronze composition itself was being evaluated at this stage; Morocco's subsidiary coinage had historically favored bronze, and the switch required bureaucratic sign-off from Paris.
The Lec#206c designation places this among a narrow range of documented piedfort trials for the series. Surviving examples are almost exclusively in institutional or specialist collections.
Piedforts — struck at double or greater thickness on standard planchet dies — were never intended for circulation. The Banque d'État du Maroc commissioned these essais during the mid-1920s as formal presentation pieces, submitted to French colonial authorities and treasury officials for design and alloy approval before any production run was authorized. The aluminium bronze composition itself was being evaluated at this stage; Morocco's subsidiary coinage had historically favored bronze, and the switch required bureaucratic sign-off from Paris.
The Lec#206c designation places this among a narrow range of documented piedfort trials for the series. Surviving examples are almost exclusively in institutional or specialist collections.