The 1935 Brussels International Exposition — officially the Exposition Universelle et Internationale — was one of the last great world's fairs of the interwar period, drawing over 20 million visitors to Laeken. Belgium issued commemorative coinage for the event in both French and Dutch-language versions, reflecting the country's entrenched linguistic divide that had been a source of legislative friction since the Flemish Movement gained parliamentary traction in the 1890s. This bronze piece never progressed beyond the pattern stage, leaving its proposed 50-franc denomination unissued in circulating form.
The 1935 Brussels International Exposition — officially the Exposition Universelle et Internationale — was one of the last great world's fairs of the interwar period, drawing over 20 million visitors to Laeken. Belgium issued commemorative coinage for the event in both French and Dutch-language versions, reflecting the country's entrenched linguistic divide that had been a source of legislative friction since the Flemish Movement gained parliamentary traction in the 1890s. This bronze piece never progressed beyond the pattern stage, leaving its proposed 50-franc denomination unissued in circulating form.