Philip IV Counterstamped 7-1/2 Reales ND (1651-1652) VF Details (Environmental Damage) NGC, Potosi mint, KM-C19.7. Host: Bolivia Philip IV Cob 8 Reales 1647; Countermark: Two Crowned C flanked by two beads (VF Standard). A survivor from the Potosi scandal bearing two stamps and a desirable full 1647 date. Accompanied by the original collector envelope. Organized by the assayers and other mint workers, the plan behind the "Potosi Scandal" was to reduce the purity of their coins while the thieves kept the remaining silver for themselves. The impacts were immense, even shaking Spain's reputation with the Asian trade, where merchants had the upmost trust for the Spanish Cob's silver quality. A transition of coinages occurred, full of unsuccessful attempts to uniformize the currency, one of them being the countermarking of the scandal coins with Crowned letters (or crowns alone), reducing the 8 Reales to 7 1/2 Reales. To set in stone the "New Potosi mint", a new style of Cobs was created (Pillars and Waves) and the scandal coins, countermarked or not, were to be re-melted/destroyed. HID09801242017 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved www.HA.com/TexasAuctioneerLicenseNotice
Starting price | 1 USD |
According to the auction house, the current bid is 725 USD. |