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| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 裏面の説明 | The crowned quartered arms of Spain occupy the central field, displaying the castles of Castile and lions of León in the principal quarters, with the pomegranate of Granada in base and the fleurs-de-lis of the Bourbon dynasty in the escutcheon at center. The shield is flanked on either side by elaborate laurel and olive branches tied at the base, with the denomination numeral 4 to the left and the value mark S to the right of the arms. The mint mark NG (Nueva Guatemala) and assayer initial M appear in the lower exergual area. The circumferential legend IN • UTROQ • FELIX • AUSPICE • DEO encircles the design, and a dentilated border frames the entire reverse. |
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| 縁 | Reeded |
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| 追加情報 |
Carlos IV's reign over the Spanish colonial mints was administratively turbulent from the start — he inherited a system already strained by Bourbon reform pressures, and the Guatemala mint in particular operated under chronic bullion supply problems tied to inconsistent outputs from regional mining interests in Honduras and Chiapas. The 4 escudos denomination occupied an awkward middle position in colonial trade, too heavy for routine commerce but too light for major mercantile settlements, which kept circulation figures modest and survival rates in collectible condition comparatively favorable.
KM#57 spans a seven-year window that brackets Spain's entry into the French Revolutionary Wars and the subsequent disruption to Atlantic trade — circumstances that affected bullion flows to New World mints more than the coins themselves record.