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1000 Livres Tournois

Issuer Intendance Générale des Colonies
Year 1788
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Value 1000 Livres Tournois
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Obverse lettering ISLES DE FRANCE ET DE BOURBON
BILLET DE MILLE LIVRES TOURNOIS QUI AURA COURS AUX ISLES DE FRANCE ET DE BOURBON CONFORMÉMENT À L'ÉDIT DU ROI, DU 10 JUIN 1788
MILLE LIVRES
DE VAIVRE, Intendant général des Colonies
LE BRASSEUR, Intendant général des fonds de la Marine & des Colonies
Reverse description Completely unprinted reverse on plain cream paper, bearing no design, text, or security elements of any kind; the surface shows age-toning and staining consistent with the note's period, along with a vertical adhesive tape repair at the left edge.
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Comments

The Intendance Générale des Colonies issued colonial livres tournois notes under royal authority to manage chronic specie shortages across France's Caribbean possessions — a problem that had plagued Saint-Domingue, Martinique, and Guadeloupe for most of the eighteenth century. Hard coin consistently drained out of the colonies through trade imbalances, leaving administrators dependent on paper instruments that local merchants accepted only under duress.

1788 was a particularly fraught moment to be issuing high-denomination colonial paper. The French crown's finances were visibly collapsing, and confidence in any royal obligation — metropolitan or colonial — was deteriorating fast. Within a year the Revolution would render the issuing authority itself extinct.

De Vaivre served as Intendant of Saint-Domingue; Le Brasseur's countersignature indicates dual administrative authorization, a safeguard against unilateral overissuance.

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