Syria's coinage during this period was administered entirely by the Banque de Syrie et du Liban, a French-controlled institution operating under the League of Nations mandate granted to France after World War I. The franc-anchored monetary system imposed on Syria was deeply resented by Arab nationalist factions, and these silver piastre coins circulated through a politically volatile decade that included the suppression of the Great Syrian Revolt of 1925–1927 and the failed Franco-Syrian Treaty of 1936, which the French parliament ultimately refused to ratify. The .680 fineness was a deliberate step below the traditional .835 silver used in Ottoman-era coinage that Syrian merchants still remembered.
Syria's coinage during this period was administered entirely by the Banque de Syrie et du Liban, a French-controlled institution operating under the League of Nations mandate granted to France after World War I. The franc-anchored monetary system imposed on Syria was deeply resented by Arab nationalist factions, and these silver piastre coins circulated through a politically volatile decade that included the suppression of the Great Syrian Revolt of 1925–1927 and the failed Franco-Syrian Treaty of 1936, which the French parliament ultimately refused to ratify. The .680 fineness was a deliberate step below the traditional .835 silver used in Ottoman-era coinage that Syrian merchants still remembered.