The Spanish Republic's 1937 iron pattern coinage was a direct consequence of the Civil War strangling normal metal supplies. With silver long gone from circulation and copper increasingly scarce, the Republic's treasury experimented with ferrous alternatives to keep small denomination coinage viable in the shrinking territory it still controlled. Patterns in iron from this period rarely made it past trial striking — the metal corroded badly in circulation conditions and the pressing machinery at the Barcelona and Valencia facilities was not well-suited to the hardness.
The Aureo reference places this among a small group of documented Republican iron trials, most of which survived only in institutional collections or with officials who fled after 1939.
The Spanish Republic's 1937 iron pattern coinage was a direct consequence of the Civil War strangling normal metal supplies. With silver long gone from circulation and copper increasingly scarce, the Republic's treasury experimented with ferrous alternatives to keep small denomination coinage viable in the shrinking territory it still controlled. Patterns in iron from this period rarely made it past trial striking — the metal corroded badly in circulation conditions and the pressing machinery at the Barcelona and Valencia facilities was not well-suited to the hardness.
The Aureo reference places this among a small group of documented Republican iron trials, most of which survived only in institutional collections or with officials who fled after 1939.