Fernando VII's relationship with Navarre was constitutionally distinct from his rule over Castile — the kingdom retained its own fueros, its own coinage rights, and its own fiscal apparatus long after the rest of Spain had been absorbed into a more centralized monetary system. This 6 Maravedis issue, struck in the final years before the Liberal Triennium forced Fernando to swear the 1812 Constitution, represents one of the last exercises of that separate minting authority.
Production spanned only 1819 and 1820 before political upheaval interrupted it entirely.
Fernando VII's relationship with Navarre was constitutionally distinct from his rule over Castile — the kingdom retained its own fueros, its own coinage rights, and its own fiscal apparatus long after the rest of Spain had been absorbed into a more centralized monetary system. This 6 Maravedis issue, struck in the final years before the Liberal Triennium forced Fernando to swear the 1812 Constitution, represents one of the last exercises of that separate minting authority.
Production spanned only 1819 and 1820 before political upheaval interrupted it entirely.