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obverse
reverse
Real Casa de la Moneda

10 Euro – Spain

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: VIII Serie – House of Bourbon coinage
Spain
Context
Year: 2017
Issuer: Spain Issuer flag
Ruler: Felipe VI
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 7,500
Material
Diameter: 40 mm
Weight: 27 g
Silver weight: 24.98 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1396
Numista: #135732
Value
Exchange value: 10 EUR = $11.81
Bullion value: $69.99
Inflation-adjusted value: 12.51 EUR

Obverse

Description:
A circle encloses the reverse of an 1808 8 Reales coin (Carlos IV, KM# 432.1), depicting the Royal Coat of Arms of Castilla y León with Granada enté en point and central Bourbon fleurs-de-lis.
Inscription:
ESPAÑA 2017

M

10 EURO

HISPANIARUM · REX ·

R 8

M FA
Translation:
Spain 2017

M

10 Euro

King of the Spains

R 8

M FA
Script: Latin
Languages: Spanish, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Obverse of an 8 Reales coin, depicting Carlos IV with a Prussian-style pigtail tied with a bow.
Inscription:
CAROLUS IIII · DEI · G ·

· 1808 ·
Translation:
Charles IV by the Grace of God · 1808 ·
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint of Madrid(M)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2017M7,500Proof

Historical background

In 2017, Spain was a fully integrated member of the Eurozone, having used the euro as its sole legal tender since 2002. The country's monetary policy was entirely set by the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt, which focused on maintaining price stability across the entire currency bloc. For Spain, this meant that key decisions on interest rates and quantitative easing were made with the broader Eurozone economy in mind, not specifically Spain's domestic situation. This framework provided stability and eliminated exchange rate risk with its major trading partners, but also meant Spain had no independent monetary tools to address its specific economic challenges.

The year 2017 was marked by continued recovery from the severe financial and sovereign debt crises of 2008-2014. A critical lingering issue was the high level of non-performing loans held by Spanish banks, a legacy of the property market crash. While significant progress had been made through EU-backed banking restructuring, this burden continued to constrain credit growth. Furthermore, Spain's public debt-to-GDP ratio remained elevated at close to 100%, limiting fiscal policy flexibility and keeping the country under the European Commission's corrective arm for excessive deficit procedures, albeit with a path towards compliance.

Politically, the currency situation was indirectly a point of contention. The year saw heightened tensions over Catalan independence, culminating in an illegal referendum and a unilateral declaration of independence in October. Secessionist voices often criticized the euro as a symbol of lost sovereignty and argued for a return to a national currency (a "peseta") as part of a hypothetical new state. However, mainstream economic analysis and the central Spanish government strongly warned that "Euro-exit" would be catastrophic, causing massive capital flight, bank runs, and devaluation. Thus, while the euro itself was not in doubt for the vast majority of Spaniards and their institutions, it became entangled in the nation's deepest constitutional crisis in decades.

Series: Numismatic Jewels

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Legendary