The County of Girona operated as a Frankish march territory, nominally subordinate to the Carolingian crown, before its comital line merged with Barcelona under Bernat I in 878 — making attributions to "County of Girona" as a standalone issuing authority somewhat contentious among specialists. Production across this century-long span was almost certainly irregular, tied to comital political needs rather than sustained mint activity. The extreme lightness of surviving examples is not degradation; these were struck to this weight intentionally, functioning within a fragmented local economy where Carolingian monetary norms had collapsed but no replacement system had yet consolidated.
The County of Girona operated as a Frankish march territory, nominally subordinate to the Carolingian crown, before its comital line merged with Barcelona under Bernat I in 878 — making attributions to "County of Girona" as a standalone issuing authority somewhat contentious among specialists. Production across this century-long span was almost certainly irregular, tied to comital political needs rather than sustained mint activity. The extreme lightness of surviving examples is not degradation; these were struck to this weight intentionally, functioning within a fragmented local economy where Carolingian monetary norms had collapsed but no replacement system had yet consolidated.