In 1590, France was in the throes of the French Wars of Religion, a series of devastating civil conflicts between Catholics and Protestants (Huguenots). The nation was effectively divided, with King Henry IV, a Protestant, fighting to secure his throne against the Catholic League, which was backed by Spain. This prolonged political and military instability created an economic catastrophe. Warfare disrupted agriculture, trade, and tax collection, leading to widespread famine and impoverishment, which in turn severely undermined the royal treasury and the overall monetary system.
The currency itself was in a state of severe debasement and chaos. To finance the endless wars, successive monarchs and the Catholic League in Paris resorted to repeatedly reducing the precious metal content in coins, a practice known as
augmentation. This led to a proliferation of underweight and low-quality
liards (small copper coins) and
testons (silver coins) in circulation. The result was rampant inflation, as the nominal value of coins far exceeded their intrinsic metal worth, and a loss of public confidence in the currency. Different regions, controlled by rival factions, often issued their own coinage, further complicating commerce and creating a fragmented monetary landscape.
This monetary instability was a critical problem for Henry IV as he besieged Paris in 1590. He understood that winning the war required not just military victory but also restoring economic order. While immediate reform was impossible during the ongoing siege, the crisis of the 1590s laid the groundwork for his future policies. After his conversion to Catholicism in 1593 and his eventual coronation, one of his paramount achievements, aided by his minister the Duke of Sully, would be the systematic restoration of the French currency, stabilizing the
livre tournois and re-establishing royal fiscal authority in the early 17th century.