El Salvador had no mint of its own in the early 1860s and relied heavily on countermarking foreign silver to legitimize it for domestic circulation. This Type IV application — a small punched mark — was applied to South American colonial and early republican 2 reales pieces already in circulation, effectively nationalizing foreign coinage by government decree rather than by striking new coin.
The countermarking program ran against a chaotic regional monetary backdrop, with Central American states competing and cooperating in overlapping currency arrangements following the collapse of the Federal Republic of Central America in 1839.
El Salvador had no mint of its own in the early 1860s and relied heavily on countermarking foreign silver to legitimize it for domestic circulation. This Type IV application — a small punched mark — was applied to South American colonial and early republican 2 reales pieces already in circulation, effectively nationalizing foreign coinage by government decree rather than by striking new coin.
The countermarking program ran against a chaotic regional monetary backdrop, with Central American states competing and cooperating in overlapping currency arrangements following the collapse of the Federal Republic of Central America in 1839.