| Country | Belgium |
|---|---|
| Ruler | Leopold II (1865-1909) |
| Face Value | 5 Francs |
| Year of issue | 1868 |
| Metal | Silver |
| Fineness | 900 |
| Catalogue # | KM# 24; LA#BFM 127 |
| Weight, g. | 24,75 |
| Diameter, mm. | 37,29 |
| Our code | E216 |
| Die Axis | ↑↓ |
| Additional info | Position A: reverse (value) facing up, text on edge is normal. |
BELGIUM, Leopold II, 5 Francs 1868, VF
In stock
Obverse: The portrait in left profile of Leopold II of Belgium surrounded with the legend in French and the designer’s name at the bottom.
Lettering (French): LEOPOLD II ROI DES BELGES; LEOP WIENER
Engraver: Leopold Wiener
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Reverse: The Belgian coat of arms within a wreath dividing the value with a motto in French above and the year below.
Lettering (French): L’UNION FAIT LA FORCE; 5 F; 1868
Translation: Unity Makes Strength
Engraver: Leopold Wiener
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Edge: Plain with lettering
Lettering (French): DIEU PROTEGE LA BELGIQUE ***
Translation: God Protects Belgium
The pictures provided are of the actual coin for sale.
Guaranteed genuine.
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€ 59
In stock
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INSURANCE:
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OTHER:
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• Please check with your country’s customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to buying.
22 August 2025:
Important Notice for USA Customers
Please note that, due to the new U.S. customs tariffs, Post of Slovenia has temporarily suspended shipments to the United States. Unfortunately, this means we are unable to send orders to the USA at this time.
We will resume shipping to the USA as soon as the service becomes available again. Thank you for your understanding and patience.
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History
Belgium in 1868 was a country that had existed for less than forty years – and was already one of the most industrialized nations on earth.
Born from revolution in 1830, carved out of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in a moment of romantic nationalist uprising, the new Kingdom of Belgium had chosen its king from the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and set about building a modern state with remarkable speed. By the 1860s, Belgium had the densest railway network in Europe, coalfields and ironworks that rivalled Britain’s, a textile industry that clothed half the continent. For a small, flat country wedged between France, Prussia, and the sea, it had achieved something extraordinary: prosperity through industriousness, and sovereignty through the careful cultivation of great-power neutrality.
The 5 Francs of 1868 bears the profile of Leopold II, just three years into a reign that would last forty-four years and carry his name across two continents – though for very different reasons. In 1868 he was thirty-three years old, newly crowned, outwardly conventional, inwardly consumed by an ambition that Belgium itself was too small to contain. He studied colonial maps obsessively. He corresponded with explorers. He was already dreaming of Africa, though it would be another decade before he found his way there.
The coin itself was part of a wider European architecture. In 1865, Belgium, France, Italy, and Switzerland had established the Latin Monetary Union – a bold agreement to standardize their silver and gold coinage so that a Belgian franc, a French franc, and an Italian lira would be freely interchangeable across borders. The 5 Francs piece, struck to precise specifications of weight and fineness, was the flagship denomination of this system – the largest silver coin in everyday circulation, accepted from Brussels to Palermo without question or exchange. It was, in its quiet way, the nineteenth century’s attempt at a common European currency.
The reverse inscription reads L’UNION FAIT LA FORCE – Unity Makes Strength – the Belgian national motto, adopted at independence and never more apt than in this era of monetary cooperation and industrial confidence.
What makes 1868 a particularly charged moment is the shadow of what follows. The Franco-Prussian War of 1870 would shatter the European balance of power. The German Empire, proclaimed in 1871 in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles, would transform Belgium’s eastern neighbor from a patchwork of states into a single, formidable, and increasingly menacing power. And Leopold II, the composed young king on this coin’s obverse, would go on to establish a private empire in the Congo of such brutal exploitation that it became a scandal that shook the conscience of the Western world.
But in 1868, none of that had happened yet. The coin circulated through a prosperous, optimistic small nation that had every reason to believe the future was bright.











