Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Colombia
Context
Years: 1875–1885
Issuer: Colombia Issuer flag
Period:
Currency:
(since 1847)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 1,452,000
Material
Diameter: 14.3 mm
Weight: 1.25 g
Silver weight: 0.83 g
Thickness: 0.9 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 66.6% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard174a
Numista: #11421
Value
Exchange value: 0.05 COP
Bullion value: $2.41

Obverse

Description:
Liberty bust left, headband, country above, date below.
Inscription:
ESTADOS UNIDOS DE COLOMBIA

LIBERTAD

1880
Translation:
UNITED STATES OF COLOMBIA

LIBERTY

1880
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Denomination between cornucopias, weight left, fineness right, mint below.
Inscription:
GRAM.1,250

5

CENT

BOGOTA LEI 0,666
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Bogota MintBOGOTA
Casa de Moneda de ColombiaMEDELLIN

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
187577,000
187619,000
187794,000
1878190,000
1879177,000
188044,000
1881219,000
1882
1883412,000
1884220,000
1885

Historical background

In 1875, Colombia was navigating a complex and fragmented monetary landscape as a young republic, still grappling with the economic and administrative legacies of its colonial past and mid-century political instability. The country operated without a unified national currency; instead, a heterogeneous mix of coins circulated. These included silver and gold coins minted in the colonial era, foreign coins (particularly from Peru, Bolivia, and France), and a limited supply of coins issued by the nascent federal government. This lack of standardization created significant challenges for commerce, as the value of coins depended not only on their metallic content but also on their origin and wear, leading to confusion and inefficiency in daily transactions.

The monetary system was fundamentally bimetallic, based on both gold and silver, but without a fixed legal ratio between the two metals that aligned with their market values. This often led to the disappearance of one metal from circulation (Gresham's Law), as individuals would hoard or export the undervalued coinage. Furthermore, the government faced chronic fiscal deficits and had limited capacity to mint sufficient coinage to meet the economy's needs, leading to a scarcity of small-denomination currency that hampered retail trade. The banking system was in its infancy, and paper money, while issued by some private banks, was not yet a trusted or widespread medium of exchange, especially outside major commercial centers like Bogotá or Medellín.

This chaotic currency situation reflected the broader struggles of state-building in the United States of Colombia (1863-1886), a highly decentralized federal system where monetary authority was not yet firmly consolidated. The disparate coinage acted as a brake on economic integration and national market formation. Consequently, the 1870s set the stage for future monetary reforms, which would culminate in the subsequent decades with the establishment of the Banco Nacional (1880), the formal adoption of the gold standard (1907), and the eventual creation of a single, managed national currency under a stronger central state.
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