Difference between revisions of "Peru 1750-L R 1/2 real"
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[[Image:Aureo391-1329.jpg|550px|thumb|Áureo y Calicó sale 391, lot 1329]] | [[Image:Aureo391-1329.jpg|550px|thumb|Áureo y Calicó sale 391, lot 1329]] | ||
| − | This specimen was lot 1329 in Aureo y Calicó sale 391 (Barcelona, June 2022), where it sold for €240 (about US$302 including buyer's fees). The catalog description<sup>[1]</sup> noted, <blockquote>"''1750. Fernando VI. Lima. R. 1/2 real. (AC. 42). Tipo monograma, en nuestra opinión, para esta fecha, tanto o más rara que la de tipo castillo. MBC.'' ([[Peru]], Ferdinand VI, half real of 1750, Lima mint, monogram type. In our opinion, for this date, this type is rarer than the castle type. Very fine.)"</blockquote> Despite pleas from locals in Lima for a mint, Spanish authorities preferred to concentrate coinage production at Potosi in Upper Peru. The Lima mint was shuttered multiple times by orders from Spain, not to reopen permanently until 1684. Cob two reales were struck at the Lima mint | + | This specimen was lot 1329 in Aureo y Calicó sale 391 (Barcelona, June 2022), where it sold for €240 (about US$302 including buyer's fees). The catalog description<sup>[1]</sup> noted, <blockquote>"''1750. Fernando VI. Lima. R. 1/2 real. (AC. 42). Tipo monograma, en nuestra opinión, para esta fecha, tanto o más rara que la de tipo castillo. MBC.'' ([[Peru]], Ferdinand VI, half real of 1750, Lima mint, monogram type. In our opinion, for this date, this type is rarer than the castle type. Very fine.)"</blockquote> Despite pleas from locals in Lima for a mint, Spanish authorities preferred to concentrate coinage production at Potosi in Upper Peru. The Lima mint was shuttered multiple times by orders from Spain, not to reopen permanently until 1684. Cob two reales were struck at the Lima mint 1747-52 for Ferdinand VI of Spain and became the "two bits" of pirate lore. The fineness was lowered from 0.931 to 0.917 in 1728. The Mexico City mint was converted to milled coinage in 1732-34 but Lima would not follow suit until 1751. |
''Recorded mintage:'' unknown but an uncommon type, particularly with a legible date. | ''Recorded mintage:'' unknown but an uncommon type, particularly with a legible date. | ||
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''Links to:'' | ''Links to:'' | ||
| − | * [[Peru | + | * [[Peru 1748-L V 1/2 real|(1)748 ½ real]] |
| − | |||
* [[Peru 1749-L R 4 reales|1749 4 reales]] | * [[Peru 1749-L R 4 reales|1749 4 reales]] | ||
* [[Peru 1749-L R 2 escudos|1749 2 escudos]] | * [[Peru 1749-L R 2 escudos|1749 2 escudos]] | ||
| + | * [[Guatemala 1750-G J 1/2 real]] | ||
* [[Mexico 1750-Mo M 1/2 real]] | * [[Mexico 1750-Mo M 1/2 real]] | ||
| + | * [[Peru 1750-L R 2 reales|1750 "royal" 2 reales]] | ||
* [[Peru 1750-L R 8 reales|1750 8 reales]] | * [[Peru 1750-L R 8 reales|1750 8 reales]] | ||
| + | * [[Peru 1750-L R escudo|1750 escudo]] | ||
* [[Peru 1750-L R 2 escudos|1750 2 escudos]] | * [[Peru 1750-L R 2 escudos|1750 2 escudos]] | ||
* [[Peru 1750-L R 4 escudos|1750 4 escudos]] | * [[Peru 1750-L R 4 escudos|1750 4 escudos]] | ||
* [[Peru 1750-L R 8 escudos|1750 8 escudos]] | * [[Peru 1750-L R 8 escudos|1750 8 escudos]] | ||
| − | * [[Peru | + | * [[Peru (1)751-L R 1/2 real|(1)751 ½ real]] |
* [[Coins and currency dated 1750]] | * [[Coins and currency dated 1750]] | ||
[[Category: Selections from Aureo sale 391]][[Category:Cob coinage of Latin America and Spain]] | [[Category: Selections from Aureo sale 391]][[Category:Cob coinage of Latin America and Spain]] | ||
Latest revision as of 15:56, 5 December 2025
This specimen was lot 1329 in Aureo y Calicó sale 391 (Barcelona, June 2022), where it sold for €240 (about US$302 including buyer's fees). The catalog description[1] noted,
"1750. Fernando VI. Lima. R. 1/2 real. (AC. 42). Tipo monograma, en nuestra opinión, para esta fecha, tanto o más rara que la de tipo castillo. MBC. (Peru, Ferdinand VI, half real of 1750, Lima mint, monogram type. In our opinion, for this date, this type is rarer than the castle type. Very fine.)"
Despite pleas from locals in Lima for a mint, Spanish authorities preferred to concentrate coinage production at Potosi in Upper Peru. The Lima mint was shuttered multiple times by orders from Spain, not to reopen permanently until 1684. Cob two reales were struck at the Lima mint 1747-52 for Ferdinand VI of Spain and became the "two bits" of pirate lore. The fineness was lowered from 0.931 to 0.917 in 1728. The Mexico City mint was converted to milled coinage in 1732-34 but Lima would not follow suit until 1751.
Recorded mintage: unknown but an uncommon type, particularly with a legible date.
Specification: 1.69 g, 0.917 silver, this specimen 1,52 g.
Catalog reference: KM 41, AC. 547, Cayón-10168.
- Michael, Thomas, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1701-1800, 7th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2016.
- Cayón, Adolfo, Clemente Cayón and Juan Cayón, Las Monedas Españolas, del Tremis al Euro: del 411 a Nuestros Dias, 2 volumes, Madrid: Cayón-Jano S.L., 2005.
- Calicó, Xavier, Numismática Española: Catálogo General con Precios de Todas las Monedas Españolas Acuñadas desde Los Reyes Católicos Hasta Juan Carlos I, 1474 a 2001, Barcelona: Aureo & Calicó, 2008.
- Menzel, Sewall, Cobs, Pieces of Eight and Treasure Coins, New York: The American Numismatic Society, 2004.
- [1]Sisó, Teresa, Eduard Domingo and Lluís Lalana, Subasta Numismática 391, Barcelona: Aureo y Calicó, 2022.
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