Puigcerdà sits in the Cerdanya, a high Pyrenean valley split between Castilian-dominated Catalonia and France — and in 1641, that geography made it a flashpoint. This coin emerges directly from the Corpus de Sang and the subsequent Catalan revolt, during which the Generalitat renounced Philip IV and placed Catalonia under the protection of Louis XIII of France. Municipal emergency issues like this one were struck to pay troops and sustain a wartime economy after the breakdown of normal royal monetary supply.
The PRINSIPATS legend reflects Catalan institutional insistence on the Principality's distinct juridical status, a point the rebels were making in metal as much as in politics. Puigcerdà itself fell to Spanish forces in 1659, the same year the Treaty of the Pyrenees permanently divided the Cerdanya along national lines.
Puigcerdà sits in the Cerdanya, a high Pyrenean valley split between Castilian-dominated Catalonia and France — and in 1641, that geography made it a flashpoint. This coin emerges directly from the Corpus de Sang and the subsequent Catalan revolt, during which the Generalitat renounced Philip IV and placed Catalonia under the protection of Louis XIII of France. Municipal emergency issues like this one were struck to pay troops and sustain a wartime economy after the breakdown of normal royal monetary supply.
The PRINSIPATS legend reflects Catalan institutional insistence on the Principality's distinct juridical status, a point the rebels were making in metal as much as in politics. Puigcerdà itself fell to Spanish forces in 1659, the same year the Treaty of the Pyrenees permanently divided the Cerdanya along national lines.