The Société Anonyme de la Grande Comore was a French colonial plantation conglomerate operating on the island, and its token coinage functioned as a closed-currency system binding agricultural laborers — overwhelmingly indentured workers — to company stores. French colonial authorities permitted such scrip arrangements well into the twentieth century across their Indian Ocean territories, effectively insulating plantation economies from metropolitan monetary oversight. The 1922 date places this issue squarely in the postwar period when the société was consolidating land holdings following years of contested German and French administrative rivalry over the Comoros.
The Société Anonyme de la Grande Comore was a French colonial plantation conglomerate operating on the island, and its token coinage functioned as a closed-currency system binding agricultural laborers — overwhelmingly indentured workers — to company stores. French colonial authorities permitted such scrip arrangements well into the twentieth century across their Indian Ocean territories, effectively insulating plantation economies from metropolitan monetary oversight. The 1922 date places this issue squarely in the postwar period when the société was consolidating land holdings following years of contested German and French administrative rivalry over the Comoros.