1 Franc SOFIM

1 Franc (SOFIM) - obverse1 Franc (SOFIM) - reverse

© Jacques BLARD (CC BY-NC-SA)

Features

Issuer Glorioso Islands (Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean)
Type Token
Year 1948
Value 1 Franc (1 XPF)
Currency CFP franc (1945-date)
Composition Aluminium
Weight 1.3 g
Diameter 23 mm
Shape Round
Technique Milled, countermarked
Orientation Coin alignment ↑↓
Demonetized Yes
Number
N#
173872

Obverse

Marianne left, wearing a winged phrygian cap.
4 boats in the background.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE UNION FRANÇAISE
L.BAZOR G.B.
1958

Engraver: Lucien Georges Bazor

Reverse

Round countermark:
-C-
SOFIM
ILES GLORIEUSES

On a 1 Franc Madagascar coin

Script: Latin

Lettering:
-C-
SOFIM
ILES GLORIEUSES

Engraver: Lucien Georges Bazor

Edge

Smooth

Mint

Monnaie de Paris, Paris (and Pessac starting 1973), France (864-date)

Comments

From 1952 to 1968, SOFIM (Société Française des Iles Malgaches) operated copra and phosphate mines in the Éparses Islands, which include Juan de Nova and the Glorieuses Islands. The company was first managed by Hector Patureau, who obtained a concession to mine phosphate on Juan de Nova in March 1952. During this period, the first meteorological station ("La Goulette") was built. Following Madagascar's independence in 1960, SOFIM's concession was renewed for a further 25 years. The island was then inhabited by Mauritian and Seychellois workers, who exploited the guano deposit for SOFIM. During this period, the island's infrastructure underwent significant development: the first lighthouse was built in 1965-1966. Following a workers' revolt and a fall in phosphate prices (1968), SOFIM was dissolved on Juan de Nova. In an article published in 1973, Le Nouvel Observateur suggested that "the working and living conditions of the Mauritian and Seychellois workers were terrible (corporal punishment, imprisonment) and akin to a form of slavery", a claim which appears to have been subsequently denied. During the same period, in the Glorieuses Islands, SOFIM, commissioned by Jules Lauzier and then his brother Gaston, exploited copra until 1958, employing Malagasy workers.

Coins are found with two distinct countermarks: for the Îles Glorieuses, the round hallmark reads "C. SOFIM. ILES GLORIEUSES", the C supposedly standing for Coprah; for Juan de Nova, hexagonal hallmark "P. SOFIM. JUAN DE NOVA", the P supposed to stand for Phosphate.

The vast majority are Madagascar coins, while a smaller number are French coins of the period (from the French State to 1958) and rarer coins from La Réunion and colonial continental Africa.Automatically translated

See also

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Date VG F VF XF AU UNC
1948 

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