Tự Đức's reign was the longest of the Nguyễn dynasty's later emperors, but it unfolded almost entirely under the shadow of French encroachment — the 1862 Treaty of Saigon ceded three southern provinces before the ink was dry, and successive conventions through the 1870s and 1880s strangled what remained of Vietnamese fiscal independence. Coins of this denomination continued to be struck throughout, though the mint's output became increasingly ceremonial as French commercial interests displaced indigenous monetary circulation in the south.
The 35-year striking window makes die attribution genuinely complex, and examples from the final years before the 1883 Treaty of Huế are distinguishable primarily through subtle punch variations documented by specialist collectors rather than any formal mint record.
Tự Đức's reign was the longest of the Nguyễn dynasty's later emperors, but it unfolded almost entirely under the shadow of French encroachment — the 1862 Treaty of Saigon ceded three southern provinces before the ink was dry, and successive conventions through the 1870s and 1880s strangled what remained of Vietnamese fiscal independence. Coins of this denomination continued to be struck throughout, though the mint's output became increasingly ceremonial as French commercial interests displaced indigenous monetary circulation in the south.
The 35-year striking window makes die attribution genuinely complex, and examples from the final years before the 1883 Treaty of Huế are distinguishable primarily through subtle punch variations documented by specialist collectors rather than any formal mint record.