Issued in 1808 as French forces swept through the Iberian Peninsula, this emergency coinage was authorized by the Junta of Majorca following the collapse of central Bourbon authority on the mainland. The island's relative isolation from the initial French invasion allowed its institutions to function independently, and local authorities moved quickly to supply circulating silver. The 30 sous denomination itself is an unusual hybrid — rooted in the old Mallorcan monetary system rather than the Castilian real structure, reflecting the island's distinct monetary traditions that had persisted for centuries.
Issued in 1808 as French forces swept through the Iberian Peninsula, this emergency coinage was authorized by the Junta of Majorca following the collapse of central Bourbon authority on the mainland. The island's relative isolation from the initial French invasion allowed its institutions to function independently, and local authorities moved quickly to supply circulating silver. The 30 sous denomination itself is an unusual hybrid — rooted in the old Mallorcan monetary system rather than the Castilian real structure, reflecting the island's distinct monetary traditions that had persisted for centuries.