The State of Morelos issued copper coinage in 1915 under Zapata's Ejército Libertador del Sur as a direct response to the near-total collapse of usable currency in revolutionary Mexico. Counterfeiting and hoarding had gutted confidence in paper money, and the Zapatista leadership — largely agrarian and deeply skeptical of banking institutions — preferred metal. These coins were struck with primitive equipment at improvised facilities, and the results vary wildly in quality and centering.
KM#703 is frequently encountered with crude planchet preparation and off-center dies, not from neglect but from the material conditions of insurgent minting in a state under constant military pressure from Carrancista forces.
The State of Morelos issued copper coinage in 1915 under Zapata's Ejército Libertador del Sur as a direct response to the near-total collapse of usable currency in revolutionary Mexico. Counterfeiting and hoarding had gutted confidence in paper money, and the Zapatista leadership — largely agrarian and deeply skeptical of banking institutions — preferred metal. These coins were struck with primitive equipment at improvised facilities, and the results vary wildly in quality and centering.
KM#703 is frequently encountered with crude planchet preparation and off-center dies, not from neglect but from the material conditions of insurgent minting in a state under constant military pressure from Carrancista forces.