You may need to brush up on the history of currency. So called "gold and silver" standards did not eliminate fluctuating exchange rates and valuation/devaluation cycles.
For example:
"In 1663, a new gold coinage was introduced based on the 22 carat fine guinea. Fixed in weight at 44½ to the troy pound from 1670, this coin's value varied considerably until 1717, when it was fixed at 21 shillings (21/-, 1.05 pounds). However, despite the efforts of Sir Isaac Newton, Master of the Mint, to reduce the guinea's value, this valuation overvalued gold relative to silver when compared to the valuations in other European countries"
So even in physical coin form, this only worsened with introduction of paper notes, individual currencies fluctuated in valuation from country to country.
Thus, European currencies historically were not "the same".
You a projecting modern commodity trading exchange concepts onto history - until the advent of "virtual" trading of gold - there DEFINITELY was fluctuations of the value of gold and silver between countries.
But at the time, not all gold coins were the same. A florin from northern italy was not necessarily worth the same as a ducat of identical weight. Different mints formulated their metal differently and counterfeiting was a real and serious problem. The rumour that a king had ordered the adulteration of the currency could cause prices to swing wildly. Asset backed currencies were not some edenic pre-lapsarian device of peace and plenty. As an economic mechanism they have serious problems; in some respects more so than a fiat currency.
You've just criticized bimetalism, not the concept of a backed currency. Gold will be the same value relative to gold; it's just impossible to peg gold to silver.
For example:
"In 1663, a new gold coinage was introduced based on the 22 carat fine guinea. Fixed in weight at 44½ to the troy pound from 1670, this coin's value varied considerably until 1717, when it was fixed at 21 shillings (21/-, 1.05 pounds). However, despite the efforts of Sir Isaac Newton, Master of the Mint, to reduce the guinea's value, this valuation overvalued gold relative to silver when compared to the valuations in other European countries"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_sterling#Gold_standard
So even in physical coin form, this only worsened with introduction of paper notes, individual currencies fluctuated in valuation from country to country.
Thus, European currencies historically were not "the same".