The Congo Free State was not a colony in any conventional sense — it was the private property of Léopold II, held under the legal fiction of a humanitarian mission and recognised by the major powers at the Berlin Conference of 1885. These copper centimes were among the first coins struck for what was, in effect, one man's personal African territory. The Brussels mint produced them, though for years much of the economy ran on force and rubber quotas rather than coin.
By 1908, international outcry over atrocities forced Léopold to cede the territory to the Belgian state — making this entire coinage series one of history's shorter-lived monetary experiments.
The Congo Free State was not a colony in any conventional sense — it was the private property of Léopold II, held under the legal fiction of a humanitarian mission and recognised by the major powers at the Berlin Conference of 1885. These copper centimes were among the first coins struck for what was, in effect, one man's personal African territory. The Brussels mint produced them, though for years much of the economy ran on force and rubber quotas rather than coin.
By 1908, international outcry over atrocities forced Léopold to cede the territory to the Belgian state — making this entire coinage series one of history's shorter-lived monetary experiments.