Difference between revisions of "Ecuador 1889-So DT 2 decimos"

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m (Text replacement - " .900 fine" to " 0.900 fine")
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* [[Ecuador 1884-H 1/2 centavo|1884-H ½ centavo]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1884-H 1/2 centavo|1884-H ½ centavo]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1884-H 2 decimos|1884-H 2 décimos]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1884-H 2 decimos|1884-H 2 décimos]]
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* [[Ecuador 1889-H decimo|1889-H décimo]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1889-So DT decimo|1889-S<sup>O</sup> décimo]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1889-So DT decimo|1889-S<sup>O</sup> décimo]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1889-So sucre|1889-S<sup>O</sup> sucre]]
 
* [[Ecuador 1889-So sucre|1889-S<sup>O</sup> sucre]]

Latest revision as of 12:06, 9 September 2024

from the Mountain Groan Collection
Ecuador 1889So 2 decimos rev DSLR.jpg

After a period of striking reales, pesos and escudos which must be regarded as failure, Ecuador ceased minting coins in 1862. In 1884, the government tried again, this time with coinage produced on contract by the Heaton mint in Birmingham, England. A new currency conforming to the Latin Monetary Union was introduced, the sucre, with its division the centavo. Silver dos decimos (= twenty centavos) were produced at Heaton 1884-90, at Santiago 1889-91 and at Lima, Peru, 1889-96 and 1912-15. The specimen shown is from Santiago. The date is common in all grades.

Recorded mintage: 1,000,000 plus 75,000 from Lima and 50,000 from Heaton.

Specification: 5 g, 0.900 fine silver, .144 troy oz ASW.

Catalog reference: KM 51.2.

Source:

  • Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1801-1900, 9th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019.

Link to: