In 1809, Spain was in the throes of the Peninsular War, a brutal conflict against Napoleon's occupying forces. This warfare had catastrophic effects on the Spanish economy and its currency system. The legitimate government, the Junta Central, was displaced and on the run, severely undermining its ability to manage fiscal policy. To finance the war effort, it resorted to desperate measures, including the confiscation of church and noble property and, most significantly, the massive issuance of paper money known as
vales reales (royal bonds). These were not true currency but interest-bearing promissory notes that began to circulate as money due to a severe shortage of precious metals.
The financial situation was one of hyperinflation and chaos. The over-issuance of
vales reales, without sufficient bullion reserves to back them, led to a catastrophic loss in value. By 1809, these notes were trading at a small fraction of their face value, destroying public confidence. Furthermore, the French occupation authorities in key regions like Madrid issued their own currency, while local Spanish juntas and even some military commanders also produced emergency coinage and paper notes. This resulted in a bewildering patchwork of currencies of wildly differing values, making trade and economic calculation nearly impossible.
Consequently, the Spanish monetary landscape in 1809 was defined by a retreat to tangible value. In daily transactions, people increasingly relied on scarce silver
reales and copper
maravedís, hoarding precious metals and driving small change out of circulation. Barter became common, and the economy fractured along regional lines. The currency crisis was both a symptom and a cause of the profound disintegration of the Spanish state, reflecting a nation where political sovereignty was contested and economic life had regressed to a more primitive and localized level amidst the devastation of war.