Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Scott Doll
Context
Year: 1915
Country: Mexico Country flag
Currency:
(1915—1916)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (90.2% Silver, 1% Gold)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
Numista: #448446

Obverse

Description:
Left-facing bust above date.
Inscription:
ESTADO L. Y S.DE OAXACA

1915
Translation:
State of Oaxaca, Free and Sovereign
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Centered value. Stylized "2" without internal hash lines.
Inscription:
MONEDA PROVISIONAL

AG 0.902 AU 0.010

2

PESOS
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded.

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1915

Historical background

In 1915, the State of Oaxaca, like much of revolutionary Mexico, was engulfed in a severe monetary crisis. The collapse of the Porfirio Díaz regime and the ensuing civil war between rival factions (Constitutionalists, Conventionists, and Zapatistas) shattered the national economy and destroyed confidence in the federal currency. The Huerta government's earlier over-issuance of paper money had caused rampant inflation, and by 1915, Constitutionalist leader Venustiano Carranza's own bilimbiques were becoming nearly worthless as they flooded the market without silver backing. This hyperinflation rendered federal notes practically unusable in Oaxaca, creating a vacuum in everyday commerce.

In response, Oaxaca resorted to extreme localization of currency. The state government, under the control of Constitutionalist General Jesús Carranza (brother of Venustiano), began issuing its own emergency paper money, known as vales or cartones. Simultaneously, municipal authorities, local merchants, haciendas, and even factories issued their own private scrip and tokens to facilitate trade and payroll within their limited spheres of influence. Most significantly, however, the population fell back on the historical bedrock of value: silver and gold. Pre-revolutionary coins, such as the old peso fuerte and even Spanish colonial pieces, re-emerged as the preferred and most trusted media of exchange, effectively pushing the discredited paper notes out of circulation for substantial transactions.

This fragmented monetary landscape crippled regional trade and exacerbated hardship. The proliferation of unbacked local scripts created a confusing and unreliable patchwork of currencies, each with limited acceptance outside its immediate area. The hoarding of precious metal coinage further contracted the money supply for daily use. Consequently, barter became a widespread necessity for basic goods and services. Thus, in 1915, Oaxaca's currency situation was defined by the rejection of central authority's paper, a desperate retreat into localized trust systems and silver, and a regression to pre-monetary exchange, reflecting the profound social and economic dislocation of the Revolution's most violent phase.

Series: 1915 State of Oaxaca circulation coins

2 Pesos obverse
2 Pesos reverse
2 Pesos
1915
1 Centavo obverse
1 Centavo reverse
1 Centavo
1915
3 Centavos obverse
3 Centavos reverse
3 Centavos
1915
3 Centavos obverse
3 Centavos reverse
3 Centavos
1915
2 Pesos obverse
2 Pesos reverse
2 Pesos
1915
2 Pesos obverse
2 Pesos reverse
2 Pesos
1915
2 Pesos obverse
2 Pesos reverse
2 Pesos
1915
Legendary