The French Assignat — Church Land, the Printing Press, and a Currency Burned in Public
Summary
The assignat was the paper money of the French Revolution, and like the Revolution it ended by consuming what it had created. Issued from 1790 against the vast estates seized from the Catholic Church and the crown, the assignat was meant to be the soundest paper imaginable — land cannot run away — and instead became one of history's clearest demonstrations that backing is worthless without restraint. By 1796 prices had risen roughly five hundredfold over their 1790 level, the notes were trading at a few percent of face, and the Directory did what no reform could: it gave up. The printing plates were smashed and burned in a Paris square; the successor currency failed within months; and in 1797 both were formally demonetized and France returned to metal. The verdict is repudiation — a paper experiment abandoned, its holders left with kindling.
The cause was deficit finance dressed as financial engineering. Revolutionary France inherited a bankrupt monarchy's debts and then took on the staggering cost of war against most of Europe after 1792, all while its tax-collection machinery had collapsed along with the old regime. The National Assembly's solution was to nationalize the immense landholdings of the Church — the biens nationaux — and issue interest-bearing notes, the assignats, secured against the proceeds of selling that land. In principle each assignat would be retired as the land it represented was sold. In practice the temptation was irresistible: the assignats were converted into ordinary paper currency, interest was dropped, and the presses simply kept running far ahead of any land that was actually sold.
The over-issue did what over-issue always does. From a first emission of a few hundred million livres, the float swelled toward 45 billion. As confidence drained, the assignat's depreciation accelerated into a true flight from money: in the worst stretch of 1795 it held perhaps a quarter of face value in the autumn and was in single digits by the spring, with workers demanding daily wages and racing to spend them before nightfall. The denominations climbed to match — a 10,000-franc assignat was authorized in January 1795 — the universal signature of a currency in free fall.
What ended it was the exhaustion of the trick, not a clever stabilization. The Directory destroyed the assignat presses in February 1796 and issued the mandats territoriaux, another land warrant, which began depreciating the day it appeared and lost roughly 85 percent of its value within five months. On 4 February 1797 the government demonetized both assignats and mandats, conceding that seven years of paper had ended in total failure. France ran on hard coin until Napoleon's franc germinal (1803) restored a durable metallic standard. The episode left a fear of paper money so deep that France distrusted banknotes for generations.
Timeline
The Fuse: Land You Could Hold but Never Spend
The assignat was born of a genuinely clever idea wrecked by a predictable temptation. Revolutionary France was insolvent: it had inherited the Bourbon monarchy's mountainous debt, the old tax apparatus had collapsed with the regime that ran it, and the new government needed money it had no orthodox way to raise. Its great untapped asset was the property of the Catholic Church, which the National Assembly nationalized in 1789 along with crown lands — the biens nationaux, an immense estate suddenly belonging to the nation.
The plan was elegant. The state would issue assignats, interest-bearing notes secured against this land, and use them to pay creditors and expenses. As the confiscated land was sold off, the assignats received in payment would be cancelled, steadily shrinking the float back toward zero. Land was the soundest collateral conceivable — it could not be printed, hidden, or carried abroad. Had the Assembly held to the discipline of issuing only as much paper as it had land to back, and of retiring the paper as the land sold, the assignat might have been remembered as a successful bridge through a fiscal emergency. But it converted the bonds into a general currency, stripped out the interest, and then discovered that issuing assignats was vastly easier than selling Church estates. The collateral stayed in the ground; the paper multiplied above it.
The Spiral: Forty-Five Billion and a Note for Ten Thousand
War turned a deficit into a deluge. After France declared war on Austria in 1792 and found itself fighting most of Europe, military expenditure soared, and with no functioning tax base the assignat press became the Republic's treasury. The float that had begun at a few hundred million livres climbed through the billions and toward an eventual 45 billion. Each new tranche bought a little less than the last, and the public learned the lesson faster each time. By 1796 the general price level stood roughly five hundred times its 1790 mark, and the overall stock of assignats had swollen to perhaps twenty times France's original metallic money supply.
The radical government tried to fight the arithmetic with the guillotine. The Law of the Maximum imposed price controls, and refusing the assignat — or pricing in gold — could be a capital offense during the Terror. Force held the line briefly and then failed, as force always does against a currency people no longer want. After 1794 the depreciation became a rout: the assignat held about a quarter of its face value in the autumn of 1795 and slid into single digits by the spring of 1796. Workers demanded to be paid at the end of each day and ran to spend the notes before another night's depreciation ate them; shopkeepers chalked prices that changed by the hour. The denominations told the story without commentary — a 10,000-franc assignat was authorized in January 1795, the kind of number a currency only prints when the small notes have become useless.
The Reckoning: Burning the Presses, Then Abandoning Paper
The end of the assignat was staged as public theater. On 18 February 1796 the government had the printing plates, presses, and reserve paper carried to the Place Vendôme in Paris and destroyed before a crowd — a deliberate, visible promise that no more assignats would ever be made. It was the right instinct, a credible commitment to stop printing, and a century later Germany would learn the same truth in reverse with the Rentenmark. But the Directory undercut its own gesture immediately by reaching for the same trick under a new name.
The replacement was the mandats territoriaux, issued from March 1796: once again a land warrant, redeemable in the biens nationaux, exchanged for the dead assignats at about thirty to one. The public, having just watched one land-backed paper die, extended the new one no credit at all. The mandats began depreciating from the day of issue and lost roughly 85 percent of their value within five months — a hyperinflation compressed into a single season, because the credibility the assignat had spent years destroying could not be restored by changing the name on the note. On 4 February 1797 the Directory gave up entirely, stripping both assignats and mandats of legal-tender status and demonetizing them. France simply went back to gold and silver coin, and the population, having been burned, embraced metal and distrusted paper. The durable resolution came only with Napoleon's franc germinal in 1803, a hard bimetallic standard that lasted, almost unchanged, until 1914.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The assignat's demonetization erased the savings of everyone who had held the paper rather than goods, gold, or land — wage earners, creditors, and the cautious — while enriching debtors, who repaid old obligations in worthless notes, and speculators who had read the collapse correctly. The land that had supposedly backed the currency did real work: the biens nationaux, sold off through the inflation, transferred enormous wealth from the Church and aristocracy to a new class of buyers, one of the Revolution's most durable social effects even as the paper that financed it vanished.
The deepest legacy was psychological and institutional. The assignat seared a distrust of paper money into French culture so profound that France leaned on metallic coin far longer than its neighbors and treated banknotes with suspicion well into the nineteenth century. Napoleon read the lesson precisely: his Bank of France (1800) and the franc germinal (1803) were built around hard money and convertibility, an explicit repudiation of the revolutionary experiment. The assignat thus became the standard cautionary tale of fiat money — invoked ever since, from German hyperinflation commentary to modern debates over digital currencies — as proof that the question is never what stands behind the paper, but whether anyone can be trusted to stop printing it.
Lessons
- Collateral is not a substitute for restraint: the best backing in the world cannot save a currency the issuer over-prints, so judge paper by the limit on issuance, not the asset behind it.
- War without a tax base forces the printing press; a government that cannot fund a war honestly will fund it dishonestly, through the currency.
- You cannot legislate away a flight from money — price controls and penalties for refusing the currency suppress the symptom and accelerate the disease.
- A failed currency cannot be rescued by a new name; the mandat died fast precisely because it carried the assignat's discredited mechanism.
- A genuine anchor — hard money, or a believable, enforced halt to issuance — is the only thing that ends a paper collapse, which is why France trusted nothing but coin for a generation after.
References
- Assignat Encyclopædia Britannica
- The Collapse of the French Assignat and Its Link to Virtual Currencies Today Liberty Street Economics, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Mandats territoriaux Wikipedia
- France: Inflation and Revolution American Numismatic Society
- A history of the franc: the key moments Fondation Napoléon