Belgium, 20 Franc 1865-1909
6.4516 g., .900 GOLD, .1867 oz AGW.
Brilliant Uncirculated
King Leopold II
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| This image is a courtesy of Marc Nollet of Brussels |
The eldest son of Leopold I, first king of the
Belgians, and his second wife, Marie-Louise of Orléans, Leopold became
duke of Brabant in 1846 and served in the Belgian Army. In 1853 he married Maria
Henrietta, daughter of the Austrian archduke Joseph, palatine of Hungary, and
became king of the Belgians on his father's death in December 1865. Although the
domestic affairs of his reign were dominated by a growing conflict between the
Liberal and Catholic parties over suffrage and education issues, Leopold
II concentrated on developing the nation's defenses. Aware that Belgian
neutrality, maintained during the Franco-German War (1870-71), was imperilled by
the increasing strength of France and Germany, he persuaded Parliament in 1887
to finance the fortification of and
Namur. A military conscription bill, for which he had long argued, was passed shortly
before his death.
Leopold had meanwhile become deeply involved in the Congo region,
founding the Association Internationale du Congo (1876) to explore the area,
with as his main agent. In 1884-85 he defeated an
Anglo-Portuguese attempt to conquer the Congo Basin and gained recognition by
the U.S. and the leading European powers as the sovereign of the État
Indépendant du Congo (Congo Free State), an area 80 times the size of
Belgium. The chief industry, wild rubber production, became especially
lucrative after 1891, but in 1904 exposure of mistreatment of natives in the
rubber industry marked the onset of the decline of Leopold's personal
rule in the region. Great Britain, with U.S. aid, pressured Belgium to
annex the Congo state to redress the "rubber atrocities"; the area became part
of Belgium in November 1908. Since Leopold's only son had
predeceased him, a nephew, Albert I, succeeded to the throne.
"Leopold II (of Belgium) ", Encyclopædia Britannica 1999
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You can order Standard Catalog of World Coins 1801-1900. Krause Publication from Amazon.com Very handy reference.
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