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Heritage Auctions

¼ Real – Federal Republic of Central America

Context
Year: 1845
Period:
(1821—1841)
Currency:
(1824—1851)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 11.5 mm
Weight: 0.85 g
Silver weight: 0.77 g
Thickness: 0.85 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90.3% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard23
Numista: #77399
Value
Bullion value: $2.23

Obverse

Description:
Sun behind volcanoes. Date at base.
Inscription:
1845
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Tree between mint mark and value.
Inscription:
C•R

1/4
Translation:
Gaius Rosa, one quarter.
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Edge



Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1845CR

Historical background

By 1845, the currency situation within the disintegrating Federal Republic of Central America was one of profound disorder and regional fragmentation. The federal government, which had collapsed in practical terms by 1839, no longer exercised any monetary authority, leaving the five successor states—Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica—to issue their own coinage and paper money. This led to a chaotic patchwork of currencies of varying weights, metallic content, and credibility, all circulating uneasily alongside a multitude of foreign coins, primarily Spanish colonial reales, British sovereigns, and French francs.

The primary circulating medium remained silver, specifically the old Spanish colonial real, but its value and acceptance were highly localized. Each state minted its own silver coins, often stamped with federal symbols but valued differently across borders. To finance deficits and wars, several states, notably El Salvador and Guatemala, also began issuing paper money, which was not backed by specie and quickly depreciated. This fiat money fueled inflation and was deeply distrusted by the public, leading to widespread preference for hard currency and further complicating interstate trade, which was already hampered by internal conflicts and tariffs.

Consequently, the region suffered from a severe lack of a uniform, trusted monetary standard. Exchange rates between the different state currencies were fluctuating and arbitrary, creating a significant barrier to economic recovery and integration. The situation in 1845 was, therefore, a direct reflection of the political fragmentation: monetary anarchy mirrored the civil strife, with no central bank, no coordinated policy, and no prospect for a common currency, deeply entrenching economic instability as a defining feature of the post-federal period.
Legendary