Catalog
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| Issuer | State of Aguascalientes |
|---|---|
| Year | 1915 |
| Type | Standard circulation coin |
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| Obverse description | Central device depicts a radiant Phrygian cap atop a pike, surrounded by alternating long and short rays emanating outward to fill the field, with the word LIBERTAD inscribed across the cap. The circular legend ESTADO DE AGUASCALIENTES curves along the upper periphery, while the mintmaster initials R.M. appear at the base, flanked by small decorative sprigs. The design is primitively engraved, characteristic of the emergency coinage produced during the Mexican Revolution. |
|---|---|
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| Reverse description | The large numeral 2, rendered in a cursive round-front style with cross-hatched shading, occupies the central field and is overlaid by a diagonal fasces. The date 1915 is inscribed in the upper field above the central device. An open olive or laurel wreath frames the lower portion of the design, its branches tied with a bow at the base, all executed in the rough, hand-engraved manner typical of Mexican Revolutionary emergency issues. |
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| Additional information |
Aguascalientes issued copper fractional coinage in 1915 under the authority of the Constitutionalist forces controlling the state during the Mexican Revolution's most chaotic phase. With the national monetary system effectively collapsed and Villista, Zapatista, and Carrancista factions each issuing their own emergency currency, local governments struck whatever denominations daily commerce demanded. These 2 centavos pieces filled the near-total void in small change.
Copper Revolutionary coinage from Aguascalientes is notably short-lived as a series — the Constitutionalists consolidated monetary authority quickly once Carranza's faction gained dominance.