Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Aureo & Calicó S.L., subastas numismáticas
Context
Years: 1772–1788
Issuer: Spain Issuer flag
Currency:
(1497—1833)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 21 mm
Weight: 3 g
Silver weight: 2.44 g
Thickness: 0.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 81.3% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard411
Numista: #41639
Value
Bullion value: $6.93

Obverse

Description:
King Charles III, right-facing draped bust.
Inscription:
CAROLUS III · DEI · G ·

· 1782 ·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Royal arms of Spain.
Inscription:
HISPANIARUM · REX ·

R 1

M P.J
Script: Latin

Edge

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1772MPJ
1772SCF
1773MPJ
1773SCF
1774MPJ
1774SCF
1775MPJ
1775SCF
1776MPJ
1776SCF
1777MPJ
1778MPJ
1778SCF
1779MPJ
1779SCF
1780MPJ
1780SCF
1781MPJ
1782MJD
1782MPJ
1782SCF
1783MJD
1783SCF
1784MJD
1785MDV
1785MJD
1786MDV
1787MDV
1788MDV
1788MM
1788SC

Historical background

In 1772, Spain's currency situation was characterized by significant instability and complexity, rooted in a system of multiple, often debased, coinages. The primary unit was the silver real, with eight reales making a peso or "piece of eight." However, centuries of fiscal pressure, particularly from costly wars and colonial administration, had led successive monarchs to repeatedly reduce the silver content in coins, a practice known as debasement. This created a confusing hierarchy where older, purer coins (like the peso fuerte) circulated alongside newer, lighter ones, their values determined more by metal content than face value. Furthermore, the gold escudo and a vast quantity of low-value copper vellón coins used for everyday transactions added layers to this fractured monetary landscape.

The core problem was a severe shortage of precious metals in circulation within Spain itself, despite the immense wealth flowing from its American colonies. Much of the silver from Potosí and Mexico was immediately exported to pay for foreign goods and service international debts, leaving the domestic economy starved of sound currency. This shortage was acutely felt in everyday commerce, leading to reliance on bulky and inconvenient vellón coins. The government's attempts to manage this through arbitrary adjustments to the exchange rates between gold, silver, and copper often backfired, creating uncertainty, facilitating fraud, and distorting prices.

King Charles III, a reformist Bourbon monarch, recognized that monetary chaos stifled economic growth and state authority. While major comprehensive reform would come later with the 1772 Pragmática being a stepping stone, the period was one of intense scrutiny and planning. The government's goal was to establish a uniform, national coinage based on stable intrinsic value to facilitate trade, increase tax efficiency, and assert royal control over the economy. Thus, the currency situation in 1772 was a tense prelude to the more definitive reforms that would soon follow, as the Crown sought to replace a legacy of ad-hoc financial mismanagement with a rational, centralized monetary system.

Series: 1772 Spain circulation coins

½ Real obverse
½ Real reverse
½ Real
1772-1788
1 Real obverse
1 Real reverse
1 Real
1772-1788
2 Reales obverse
2 Reales reverse
2 Reales
1772-1788
4 Reales obverse
4 Reales reverse
4 Reales
1772-1788
8 Reales obverse
8 Reales reverse
8 Reales
1772-1788
½ Escudo obverse
½ Escudo reverse
½ Escudo
1772-1785
1 Escudo obverse
1 Escudo reverse
1 Escudo
1772-1785
Somewhat Rare