This French copper one sol coin of King Louis XVI was discovered by Murray in the Surrey Hills, close to a disused trackway. It’s an unusual find for the English countryside, a small but striking reminder of one of Europe’s most turbulent periods: the French Revolution.
Louis XVI, remembered as the monarch who met his fate on the guillotine in 1793, reigned during a time of immense social and political upheaval. Coins like this circulated widely in France during the final years of the monarchy, just before revolution swept away centuries of royal rule.
Although out of place in a Surrey field, the coin’s presence may not be accidental. A nearby stately home is known to have sheltered French aristocrats fleeing the revolution, nobles who had escaped across the Channel to seek safety in England. It’s easy to imagine one of them, perhaps a count or duke, walking the land deep in thought about their uncertain future when this very coin slipped from their pocket.
Alongside other French jettons found in the same area, this discovery gives the sense that the land still holds echoes of those displaced by revolution, reminders of a world turned upside down, now quietly resting beneath the Surrey soil.

0 Comments