Charles V — the Carlist pretender, not the Holy Roman Emperor — never controlled the Spanish mint at any point during the First Carlist War, making any coinage struck in his name a political statement as much as a monetary instrument. This pattern obverse dates to 1837, mid-conflict, when Carlist forces held significant territory across the Basque Country and Navarre and maintained shadow administrative structures, including attempted coinage programs.
Pattern pieces from this episode are poorly documented in contemporary mint records, for obvious reasons. Survivors exist in small numbers, almost exclusively in institutional collections.
Charles V — the Carlist pretender, not the Holy Roman Emperor — never controlled the Spanish mint at any point during the First Carlist War, making any coinage struck in his name a political statement as much as a monetary instrument. This pattern obverse dates to 1837, mid-conflict, when Carlist forces held significant territory across the Basque Country and Navarre and maintained shadow administrative structures, including attempted coinage programs.
Pattern pieces from this episode are poorly documented in contemporary mint records, for obvious reasons. Survivors exist in small numbers, almost exclusively in institutional collections.