João III authorized a dedicated coinage for São Tomé e Príncipe as the islands were transitioning from uninhabited Portuguese discovery to the primary trans-shipment hub for enslaved Africans crossing the Atlantic — a trade that generated enough revenue to warrant its own monetary infrastructure. The pardau denomination itself was borrowed from the Indo-Portuguese monetary vocabulary, reflecting how Lisbon was simultaneously managing commercial systems across three separate ocean basins.
The Lisboa mint's production for overseas territories in this period was often irregular, with dies dispatched to colonial mints or pieces struck in Lisbon for direct shipment. Gomes records only a handful of die combinations for this type.
João III authorized a dedicated coinage for São Tomé e Príncipe as the islands were transitioning from uninhabited Portuguese discovery to the primary trans-shipment hub for enslaved Africans crossing the Atlantic — a trade that generated enough revenue to warrant its own monetary infrastructure. The pardau denomination itself was borrowed from the Indo-Portuguese monetary vocabulary, reflecting how Lisbon was simultaneously managing commercial systems across three separate ocean basins.
The Lisboa mint's production for overseas territories in this period was often irregular, with dies dispatched to colonial mints or pieces struck in Lisbon for direct shipment. Gomes records only a handful of die combinations for this type.