Ecuador's early republican coinage was struck at the Quito mint, which operated under chronic difficulties — inconsistent silver supplies, worn tooling, and an assay system inherited from the colonial era that struggled to maintain fineness targets. The .666 standard used here reflects a deliberate reduction from colonial-era fineness, a practical concession to the realities of metal availability in the Andean interior during the 1830s.
The 1837–1838 window coincides with Ecuador's turbulent first decade of full independence from Gran Colombia, which had dissolved in 1830. Mintage figures for Quito issues of this period are poorly documented, and die marriages across the two years remain incompletely catalogued.
Ecuador's early republican coinage was struck at the Quito mint, which operated under chronic difficulties — inconsistent silver supplies, worn tooling, and an assay system inherited from the colonial era that struggled to maintain fineness targets. The .666 standard used here reflects a deliberate reduction from colonial-era fineness, a practical concession to the realities of metal availability in the Andean interior during the 1830s.
The 1837–1838 window coincides with Ecuador's turbulent first decade of full independence from Gran Colombia, which had dissolved in 1830. Mintage figures for Quito issues of this period are poorly documented, and die marriages across the two years remain incompletely catalogued.