Byzantine

Fourrées

What is a fourrée?

Counterfeit coins have been around almost as long as people have been making coins. (Maybe a few minutes less?) The earliest coins were produced in Asia Minor in the 7th century BC and production of a type of counterfeit coin — a fourrée — started around the same time.

The counterfeiter made a profit by making a coin that had less precious metal content than the purported face value. A fourrée has a base metal core and plated with a precious metal (usually silver) to look like its official solid precious metal counterpart.

 

How were fourrées made?

Most ancient fourrées appear to have been made by wrapping two thin pieces of silver foil around a blank copper or bronze base before striking. There would be one piece of silver foil on each side, with the two pieces overlapping around the edge. If the coin was subjected to high enough heat and struck hard enough, an alloy would be created between the foil and the base metal, fusing the layers together.

Later, silver was added to the base metal coin after it had been struck, which allowed even less silver to be used. It’s not clear how counterfeiters managed this feat. Possibly the coin was dipped in molten silver, brushed with molten silver, or dusted with powdered silver and heated until the silver melted onto the surface.

Similar processes could be used to plate base metal cores with gold, instead of silver. Gold foil is considerably easier to work with, so this type of fourrée presented fewer technical challenges.

 

How were fourrées detected?

Over time, the plating on the higher parts of the fourreés could wear off, exposing the base metal underneath. But instead of waiting for time to expose a counterfeit, other methods were used. Since copper and bronze are less dense metals than silver and gold, fourrées are almost always underweight. In ancient and medieval times, as well as being weighed, coins were also often cut into in order to check whether they were plated or solid. 

In a typical Greek city, official testers sat near the banking tables in the agora (market centre) to cut into the coins to test them for authenticity. The judgement of an official tester — a dokimastes — was final and coins that were silver and the correct weight had to be accepted in commerce, whether they were minted in that agora's city or not.

In Athens, counterfeits were were slashed by the dokimastes, removed from circulation, and dedicated to the Mother of the Gods (Rhea, later associated with the Asian Cybele). Fourrées have been found near the Metroön, a temple dedicated to her, and today it is easy to find Athenian tetradrachms with test cuts.

 

An example of an early fourrée

In 2017 I picked up this early fourrée for my collection, as a nice companion to the non-fourrée version I already had:

IONIA (c. 625-600 BCE).  Fourrée Hemihekte, uncertain mint.  Obv: Raised swastika pattern. Rev: Quadripartite incuse square punch. 0.97g 8mm

IONIA (c. 625-600 BCE). Electrum hekte, uncertain mint in northern Ionia. Obv: Raised swastika pattern. Rev: Quadripartite incuse square punch. 2.53g 9mm 

 

Struck on the Phokaic weight standard, these early lumps of metal probably come from somewhere in northern Ionia when coins were still a novelty. However, there was clearly enough standardization and trust that counterfeiting had a chance of success... even for a counterfeit that was underweight, like the first coin above (a hemihekte), which should really be half the weight of the second (a hekte). Testimony to both the good and bad sides of human ingenuity!

 

A fourrée from Magna Graecia

It is easy to see the copper inside this fourrée.  It is also significantly underweight, about 3/4 of a gram below the norm for a genuine mint product.  It is nevertheless very collectible as an ancient counterfeit!

Neapolis (c. 320-300 BCE). Fourrée didrachm. Obv: Head of nymph right; grape cluster behind. Rev: Man-headed bull standing right, crowned by Nike, NEOΠOΛITHΣ in ex. 6.73g 20.5mm

A Roman Republican fourrée

Fourrée denarii from the Republic are quite common.  This example is very underweight (by over a gram), in part because a significant portion of the base metal core has corroded away leaving just the silver shell on one side (you can easily see the hole through the coin on the right hand side of the reverse). The small dot in front of Roma’s nose on the obverse may have been placed there by the counterfeiter so that he wouldn’t get fooled by his own (very convincing) work!

L. Sempronius Pitio (148 BCE). Fourrée denarius. Obv: Helmeted head of Roma right, PITIO to left, X (mark of value) to right. Rev: The Dioscuri galloping right, L.SEMP, ROMA in ex. 2.52g 20mm

Possibly the latest known fourrée from the 3rd century crisis

The antoninianus, first introduced by Caracalla in 215 CE, was rapidly debased over the course of the third century in an effort to meet the state’s massive military obligations. The result was runaway inflation and economic collapse. (Oops.) 

After 260 under Gallienus, there was so little silver that counterfeiting would have been pointless and impossible. This coin comes from the joint reign of Valerian and Gallienus, and was produced in 256 at the earliest (the coin is actually a “mule” of an obverse and reverse type that was never produced officially).

At this time the official antoniniani would have been composed of maybe 15-20% silver – they were basically fourrées already! Plated counterfeits may have been barely profitable if skillfully made with a very thin foil, but one would expect them to be rare.  

In fact, I have never seen another one this late, nor has Warren Esty, an expert on 3rd century fourrées.  (I encourage you to visit his fourrée page to learn more.)

Gallienus, joint reign with his father Valerian (253-260 CE; issued 256 or later). Fourrée antoninianus. Obv: GALLIENVS PF AVG, Radiate, cuirassed, and draped bust right. Rev: PROVIDENTIA AVGG, Providentia standing slightly left, holding wand over globe at her feet, and cornucopiae. 2.95g 20.5-22mm

A fourrée Byzantine solidus

Here is an example of a gold fourrée where much of the gold foil has worn off.  It would have been convincing at the time of its manufacture, except for being underweight by 1.5g.  (It would have been very difficult to pass off except perhaps in a bag of otherwise good gold, weighed in bulk.)  Now it is about as ugly as they get! But even ugly coins deserve some love.

Nicephorus II. (963-969) w/ Basil II. Fourrée gold solidus. Obv: + IhS XΓS RЄX RЄGNANTIhM, Bust of Christ facing, with decorated nimbus, wearing pallium and colobium, raising r. hand in benediction and holding Book of Gospels in l. hand Rev. NICHFOR'CE bASIL' A•Ч• ÇÇ b R’, Busts facing of Nicephorus II, with short beard, on l., wearing crown and loros, and Basil II, beardless on r., wearing crown and chlamys, holding long patriarchal cross between them. 2.87g 20mm