Henry III's persistent monetary reforms of the late 1570s and early 1580s attempted to rationalize a coinage system badly distorted by decades of religious civil war and the resulting hoarding, counterfeiting, and debasement by both royal and League-controlled mints. The Sol Parisis denomination itself was an accounting unit struggling to survive in practical circulation — its relationship to the livre had become so complicated by successive devaluations that merchants routinely refused to accept billon coins at face.
The Dauphiné attribution places this piece in the orbit of Grenoble, a mint operating under particularly close scrutiny during this period given the province's strategic sensitivity during the Wars of Religion.
Henry III's persistent monetary reforms of the late 1570s and early 1580s attempted to rationalize a coinage system badly distorted by decades of religious civil war and the resulting hoarding, counterfeiting, and debasement by both royal and League-controlled mints. The Sol Parisis denomination itself was an accounting unit struggling to survive in practical circulation — its relationship to the livre had become so complicated by successive devaluations that merchants routinely refused to accept billon coins at face.
The Dauphiné attribution places this piece in the orbit of Grenoble, a mint operating under particularly close scrutiny during this period given the province's strategic sensitivity during the Wars of Religion.