How the French Revolution created the Pound Sterling

How the French Revolution created the Pound Sterling

The French Revolution and the wars it spawned upset everything in Europe, including the financial system. In fact, the French Revolution led to the rise of the world’s first global reserve currency, the British pound sterling.

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Until the American Revolution, the Dutch Guilder had been Europe’s reserve currency. However, the wars triggered by the American Revolution and revolutionary upheavals in the Netherlands destroyed the guilder and Amsterdam’s financial markets in 1780s.

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The Dutch Patriot Revolution of 1786-1787, which wrecked the guilder, was the prelude to a greater and more destructive upheaval the French Revolution. The French Revolution led to an all-out war when Europe’s monarchs tried to crush the uprising as they had the Patriot Revolution.

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France, however, was a bigger and richer nation with Europe’s largest and most advanced army. Additionally, the French Revolutionaries could do what the Kings of France never could. The French Republics’ leaders mobilized a large percentage of the nation’s manpower and resources for the war effort.

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Consequently, the republic could put massive armies in the field and supply those forces with weapons and ammunition. Moreover, the French Republic could something no other European power at the time could. It could wage war without borrowing money.

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Ironically, the French Revolution began because King Louis XVI called a session of France’s parliament the Estates General?to solve his nation’s endless fiscal crisis. In particular, Louis XVI hoped the Estates General could pass new taxes to fill his empty treasury. France’s treasury was empty because the government had no way to issue and sell debt to raise funds like the British government had.

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The Estates General became increasingly radical and became the National Assembly, a new legislature that had the power to rewrite France’s constitution and form a new government. The National Assembly led the Revolution.

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The Age of Total War

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The age of total war had begun. Total war created an enormous problem for Europe’s most powerful nation, the United Kingdom. Great Britain had become Europe’s dominant power through the Bank of England’s ability to issue enormous amounts of debt.

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This financial power allowed His Majesty’s Government to raise and pay enormous mercenary armies and finance the world’s largest and most powerful navy. Moreover, the British could finance other nations’ war efforts.

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It was British money that kept Prussian, Austrian, Spanish, and other armies in the field against French forces for a century. Hence, the Kings of France never conquered Europe, even though they had Europe’s largest army.

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The French Revolution turned the tables by allowing the Republic to mobilize far larger armies. Moreover, the new French Armies were better trained and led than their enemies.

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By 1797, French armies had defeated the Prussians, Austrians, Spanish, and British and even conquered large swaths of territory, including all the Netherlands. France was resurgent and even capable of invading Britain itself.

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An Invasion that Backfired

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On 22 February 1797, a small French force carried out the last foreign invasion of Britain at Fishguard, Wales. The so-called Battle of Fishguard was actually a diversion designed to distract the British from an invasion of Ireland.

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Only 1,400 troops landed at Fishguard, but news of the “invasion” started a panic. As hysteria about a French landing spread, bank runs began as Britons rushed to banks to exchange banknotes for gold. This panic threatened Britain’s economy because the number of banknotes in circulation (£10,865,050)?was twice the Bank of England’s Gold reserves of £5,322,010.

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The Bank of England overprinted banknotes to finance Britain’s war with Revolutionary France. In response to the panic, Parliament passed the Bank Restriction Act of 1797. The?Bank Restriction Act?allowed the Bank of England to print unlimited amounts of banknotes.

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To explain, an older law forced the Bank of England to redeem notes for gold, which was emptying the institution’s reserves. The Restriction Act?allowed the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street to keep its gold and stay solvent. Insolvency of the Bank of England, Britain’s central bank, would have led to the collapse of the British economy.

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The Birth of the Pound Sterling

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The ability to print unlimited amounts of banknotes gave Britain the ability to finance the war. Thus, Britain kept fighting even after Napoleon Bonaparte became France’s dictator and started conquering Europe. The British could even fight France and the United States (the War of 1812) at the same time while financing the Russian, Austrian, Spanish, and Prussian war efforts.

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Predictably, the Battle of Fishguard was a miserable failure. The British Army easily defeated and rounded up the invaders, while the Royal Navy sank their ships. The British could concentrate their forces in Ireland and crush the French invasion there.

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However, the battle’s primary effect, the Bank Restriction Act, forced Britain to create a modern fiat currency. That currency became the pound sterling, the world’s reserve currency, and the basis of the British Empire.

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The Bank Restriction Act?remained on the books until 1821, six years after Napoleon’s ultimate defeat at Waterloo. Thus, the Battle of Fishguard led to the birth of the Pound Sterling, one of the most successful currencies in history. The Pound Sterling remained the world’s reserve currency until World War I and is still a popular currency. France’s fiat currency, the franc, disappeared on 1 January 1999, when France adopted the Euro.?

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Hence, a clumsy attempt to invade Britain gave the United Kingdom the weapon it needed to win the wars and destroy Napoleon. The ability to issue unlimited amounts of banknotes to finance the war.

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