Córdoba province struck its own fractional silver during the early 1850s under the authority of the Argentine Confederation, a period when no unified national coinage existed and individual provinces maintained independent monetary operations. The eight-pointed sun device tied the issue visually to the broader federalist symbolism circulating across the Río de la Plata region, though Córdoba's coins remained largely parochial in circulation — absorbed into local commerce and rarely traveling far.
The range of CJ references assigned to this type reflects documented die and date varieties across the emission's four-year span, a product of inconsistent provincial minting conditions rather than deliberate design revision.
Córdoba province struck its own fractional silver during the early 1850s under the authority of the Argentine Confederation, a period when no unified national coinage existed and individual provinces maintained independent monetary operations. The eight-pointed sun device tied the issue visually to the broader federalist symbolism circulating across the Río de la Plata region, though Córdoba's coins remained largely parochial in circulation — absorbed into local commerce and rarely traveling far.
The range of CJ references assigned to this type reflects documented die and date varieties across the emission's four-year span, a product of inconsistent provincial minting conditions rather than deliberate design revision.