The Remenbrança de Nunó Sanç, inventory of land properties distributed to the count Nuno Sanç of Roussillon and Cerdagne in Majorca, was compiled on the side of the king, after the King Jaume I of the Crown of Aragón bought all the properties after his death in 1241/42. The copists of the Remenbrança take a style of transcribing and arranging existing records and information since the Catalan conquest in the same way as Llibre del Repartiment de Mallorca, King’s inventory compiled in the form of piling up contents of land distributions just after the Catalan conquest for ensuring the legitimacy of the sovereign. Although the purpose of compilation is considered to complement information of King’s inventory both qualitatively and quantitatively, the Remenbrança was for extremely practical use because all the information related to land properties was converted to a numerical value. This finding indicates that two inventories compiled in the same way at the same time could function in any way, both practically and ideologically, depending on the editors’ intentions.