1 Franc

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  1. 1 Franc 1924
  2. 1 Franc 1960 Rare
  3. 1 Franc Coin Value
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1 Franc 1924

Tuesday, 9 February 2021

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Worth - France 1 franc 1931-1941 in the coin catalog at uCoin.net - International Catalog of World Coins.

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Country: France
Long Name: French Republic
Abbreviations: FR, FRA
Capital: Paris
Time Zones: 1 (Main Country)
Total Time Zones: 12 (with dependencies)
Dial Code: +33

Time in Dependencies of France

DependencyTypeExample CityTime
Clipperton IslandOverseas territoryClipperton IslandTue 13:55
French GuianaOverseas departmentCayenneTue 18:55
French PolynesiaOverseas collectivityPapeete
French Southern TerritoriesOverseas territoryPort-aux-FrancaisWed 02:55
GuadeloupeOverseas departmentBasse-TerreTue 17:55
MartiniqueOverseas departmentFort-de-FranceTue 17:55
MayotteOverseas departmentMamoudzouWed 00:55
New CaledoniaOverseas collectivityNoumeaWed 08:55
Réunion (French)Overseas departmentSaint-DenisWed 01:55
Saint BarthélemyOverseas collectivityGustaviaTue 17:55
Saint MartinOverseas collectivityMarigotTue 17:55
Saint Pierre and MiquelonOverseas collectivitySaint-PierreTue 18:55
Wallis and FutunaOverseas collectivityMata-UtuWed 09:55

Current Local Time in Locations in France with Links for More Information (92 Locations)

AgenTue 22:55Charleville-MézièresTue 22:55NiceTue 22:55
Aix-en-ProvenceTue 22:55ChartresTue 22:55NîmesTue 22:55
AjaccioTue 22:55ChâteaurouxTue 22:55NiortTue 22:55
AlençonTue 22:55ChaumontTue 22:55OrléansTue 22:55
AmiensTue 22:55Cherbourg-OctevilleTue 22:55PamiersTue 22:55
AngersTue 22:55Clermont-FerrandTue 22:55ParisTue 22:55
AngoulêmeTue 22:55Digne-les-BainsTue 22:55PauTue 22:55
AnnecyTue 22:55DijonTue 22:55PérigueuxTue 22:55
AuchTue 22:55DouaiTue 22:55PerpignanTue 22:55
AurillacTue 22:55ÉvreuxTue 22:55PoitiersTue 22:55
AuxerreTue 22:55GapTue 22:55QuimperTue 22:55
AvignonTue 22:55GrenobleTue 22:55ReimsTue 22:55
BastiaTue 22:55IstresTue 22:55RennesTue 22:55
BeauvaisTue 22:55La RochelleTue 22:55RodezTue 22:55
BellacTue 22:55LaonTue 22:55RouenTue 22:55
BesançonTue 22:55Le HavreTue 22:55RoyanTue 22:55
BiarritzTue 22:55Le MansTue 22:55Saint-BrieucTue 22:55
BloisTue 22:55Le Puy-en-VelayTue 22:55Saint-DenisTue 22:55
BordeauxTue 22:55LensTue 22:55Saint-ÉtienneTue 22:55
Boulogne-BillancourtTue 22:55LilleTue 22:55StrasbourgTue 22:55
Bourg-en-BresseTue 22:55LimogesTue 22:55TarbesTue 22:55
BourgesTue 22:55LyonTue 22:55ToulonTue 22:55
BrestTue 22:55MarseilleTue 22:55ToulouseTue 22:55
Brive-la-GaillardeTue 22:55MetzTue 22:55ToursTue 22:55
CaenTue 22:55Mont-de-MarsanTue 22:55TroyesTue 22:55
CahorsTue 22:55MontpellierTue 22:55Valence (Drôme)Tue 22:55
CannesTue 22:55Moulins (Allier)Tue 22:55VannesTue 22:55
CarcassonneTue 22:55MulhouseTue 22:55VerdunTue 22:55
Chalon-sur-SaôneTue 22:55NancyTue 22:55VersaillesTue 22:55
Châlons-en-ChampagneTue 22:55NantesTue 22:55VilleurbanneTue 22:55
ChambéryTue 22:55NeversTue 22:55
Tuesday, 9 February 2021

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Francis I
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1 Franc 1960 Rare

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Marcelle Vioux
Freelance writer. Author of François I; Henri IV; and others.
Alternative Titles: François I, François d’Angoulême, Francis of Angoulême

Francis I, also called (until 1515) Francis of Angoulême, French François d’Angoulême, (born Sept. 12, 1494, Cognac, France—died March 31, 1547, Rambouillet), king of France (1515–47), the first of five monarchs of the Angoulême branch of the House of Valois. A Renaissance patron of the arts and scholarship, a humanist, and a knightly king, he waged campaigns in Italy (1515–16) and fought a series of wars with the Holy Roman Empire (1521–44).

Early years

Francis was the son of Charles de Valois-Orleáns, comte d’Angoulême, and Louise of Savoy. On the accession of his cousin Louis XII in 1498, Francis became heir presumptive and was given the Duchy of Valois. With his sister Marguerite, he was raised by his mother, who had been widowed at the age of 20 and whom he deeply revered; he knelt whenever he spoke to her. No one had as much power over him as these two women. Idolized, he grew up following his own whims, without discipline and more infatuated with chivalrous romances, songs, and violent exercise than with classical studies. He was greatly admired by the gay, young circle of his mother’s cultured court for his athletic build and the elegance of his demeanour and manners. His need for female companions stemmed from this upbringing, as did his lack of realism and his chivalrous imagination.

Louis XII, distrustful of Francis, did not allow him to dabble in affairs of state but sent him off at the age of 18 to the frontiers, which had been attacked in force. There, Francis learned more about warfare and, being of a sensual nature, about the licentiousness of camp life than about how to govern the state or, even more, to govern himself. Shortly before his death, Louis XII married him to Claude, his 15-year-old daughter. On Jan. 1, 1515, at the age of 20, Francis became king of France.

His quick and shrewd mind, his amazing memory, and his universal curiosity compensated for his inexperience. But, because he was outgoing and trusting and incapable of dissembling, he was always a bad politician. The pomp of the Reims coronation, the sumptuous cortege of the solemn entry into Paris, and the lavish feasts revealed his love of ceremony and also pleased the people of Paris, who had been disheartened by a long succession of morose and sickly sovereigns.

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Promise of a great reign

Louis XII had left an army prepared to reconquer the Duchy of Milan. This ill-fated dream of recovering his great-grandmother Valentina Visconti’s heritage—which had been lost, retaken, then lost again—fascinated Francis in his turn. Ambitious for glory and urged on by turbulent young nobles, he made sure of peace with his neighbours, entrusted the regency to his mother, and galloped off to Italy.

At the bloody Battle of Marignano, charging at the head of his cavalry, he defeated the reportedly invincible Swiss mercenaries of Duke Massimiliano Sforza and his ally Pope Leo X. After the victory, by his own wish, he was knighted by the captain who had fought most bravely: Bayard, the most famous chevalier of his time.

Franc

The Pope received his conqueror in Bologna. Surrounded by his glittering pontifical court and by his famous artists, he dazzled Francis with concerts, banquets, and theatrical performances. The Pope offered him a Madonna by Raphael and negotiated a concordat that returned to the Pope the benefices of the rich church of France, while the nomination of prelates was assigned to the King, who was desirous of strengthening his authority over a clergy grown too acquisitive and independent.

Buoyed up by a victor’s prestige, the King spoke as a sovereign, using for the first time the formula of absolute power: “For such is our pleasure.” Prosperity permitted him to grant a princely pension to Sforza, as well as to Leonardo da Vinci and other artists who brought masterpieces to his court. He also signed a perpetual peace treaty with the Swiss and bought back Tournai from Henry VIII of England. And, as a pledge of unalterable friendship, the first-born royal child, Princess Louise, was affianced to the Habsburg prince Charles, heir to the Netherlands and, at 16, the new king of Spain.

Everything forecast a great reign. Francis I formed a brilliant and scholarly court at which poets, musicians, and learned men mingled with rough noblemen from the provinces whom idleness was making dangerous. He welcomed lovely ladies at court, saying, “A court without women is a year without spring and a spring without roses.” The arts, elegance, and chivalrous gallantry served to refine the licentious manners of the court.

The frail queen Claude, gentle and pious, bore a child each year. Francis respected her and sought her advice. In the meantime, he loved the dark-haired comtesse de Châteaubriant, without, however, foregoing nocturnal escapades with his childhood companions, who had now become his ministers and his favourites.

Francis toured France tirelessly, showing himself to people who had never seen a king. He was constantly travelling on horseback, winter and summer, whether well or ill. He became familiar with everything: men, roads, rivers, resources, and needs. During his travels, he emptied prisons, curtailed the abuses of judicial powers by the nobles, lavished largesse on the people, and provided games and processions for them, speaking to them in his grand manner, warmly and openly: “My friends, my beloved ones . . . .”

Popular, happy, the father of two sons, he was the most powerful sovereign in all Christendom when, in 1519, the German emperor Maximilian died. The election as emperor of Maximilian’s grandson Charles spelled ruin for Francis I, for Charles, who was already king of Spain, now encircled France with his possessions.

Quick Facts
born
September 12, 1494
Cognac, France
died
March 31, 1547 (aged 52)
Rambouillet, France
title / office
  • king, France (1515-1547)

1 Franc Coin Value

role in
notable family members
  • spouse Claude of France
  • mother Louise of Savoy
  • son Henry II
  • sister Margaret of Angoulême