Córdoba's provincial coinage survived well into the Confederation period largely because the Argentine national monetary system took decades to consolidate after independence — Buenos Aires and the interior provinces operated essentially as separate monetary zones through the 1850s. This piece was struck at the Casa de Moneda de Córdoba, one of the few functioning provincial mints still producing fractional silver at mid-century, at a moment when the national government lacked both the infrastructure and the political leverage to impose uniformity.
The multiple CJ references reflect die variety distinctions documented by Cunietti-Ferrando, with differences in the sun's ray count and point configuration driving the classification split between 60.2, 60.3, and 62.1.
Córdoba's provincial coinage survived well into the Confederation period largely because the Argentine national monetary system took decades to consolidate after independence — Buenos Aires and the interior provinces operated essentially as separate monetary zones through the 1850s. This piece was struck at the Casa de Moneda de Córdoba, one of the few functioning provincial mints still producing fractional silver at mid-century, at a moment when the national government lacked both the infrastructure and the political leverage to impose uniformity.
The multiple CJ references reflect die variety distinctions documented by Cunietti-Ferrando, with differences in the sun's ray count and point configuration driving the classification split between 60.2, 60.3, and 62.1.