Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Aureo & Calicó S.L., subastas numismáticas
Context
Year: 1661
Issuer: Spain Issuer flag
Ruler: Philip IV
Currency:
(1497—1833)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 21 mm
Weight: 1.8 g
Composition: Billon
Technique: Hammered
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard12
Numista: #112791

Obverse

Description:
Bust within circle, legend encircling.
Inscription:
PHILIPPVS IIII D G
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned arms between mintmark and value VIII, within a circle. Legend and date around.
Inscription:
HISPANIARVM REX 1661

BR

B

VIII
Script: Latin

Edge


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1661B
1661A
1661C
1661G
1661S
1661SR
1661T
1661TR

Historical background

In 1661, the Spanish monarchy under Philip IV was grappling with a severe and protracted monetary crisis, a direct consequence of decades of imperial overstretch and fiscal mismanagement. The core of the problem was the rampant debasement of the ubiquitous silver real and its larger denomination, the escudo. To finance endless wars and cover massive state deficits, the crown had repeatedly reduced the silver content in its coinage while officially maintaining its face value. This practice, combined with the widespread clipping of coins by the public, led to a proliferation of underweight and poor-quality currency in circulation, destroying public trust and disrupting commerce.

The situation created a chaotic two-tier monetary system. High-quality full-weight coins, both domestic and foreign (like the Spanish-American pieces of eight), were immediately hoarded or exported, following Gresham’s Law that "bad money drives out good." Meanwhile, everyday transactions were conducted with a confusing array of degraded and suspect coins, forcing merchants to weigh and assess each piece, and leading to price inflation as the real value of the currency fell. The crown’s attempts to fix the problem, such as the failed 1641–1642 currency reforms, only added to the confusion by introducing new denominations without resolving the fundamental issue of trust and intrinsic value.

This monetary instability was a symptom of the broader decline of Spanish hegemony. The flood of silver from the Americas, which had once financed Spain’s power, was now in sharp decline, yet the crown’s commitments remained. The desperate financial measures, including the 1661 decree to issue new copper vellón currency—a fiduciary coin with little intrinsic value—risked further inflation. Thus, the currency situation of 1661 reflected a kingdom caught in a vicious cycle: its fiscal desperation was destroying its monetary system, which in turn crippled its economy and eroded the very foundations of state revenue, deepening the crisis of the Spanish Habsburg empire.

Series: 1661 Spain circulation coins

8 Maravedis obverse
8 Maravedis reverse
8 Maravedis
1661
4 Maravedis obverse
4 Maravedis reverse
4 Maravedis
1661-1664
4 Maravedis obverse
4 Maravedis reverse
4 Maravedis
1661-1664
4 Maravedis obverse
4 Maravedis reverse
4 Maravedis
1661-1664
8 Maravedis obverse
8 Maravedis reverse
8 Maravedis
1661-1664
8 Maravedis obverse
8 Maravedis reverse
8 Maravedis
1661-1664
2 Maravedis obverse
2 Maravedis reverse
2 Maravedis
1661-1664
💎 Extremely Rare