Issued to mark the 400th anniversary of Vasco da Gama's arrival on the Malabar Coast in 1498, this coin was part of Portugal's broader commemorative program alongside the celebrated Vasco da Gama Exhibition in Lisbon — a deliberate act of imperial nostalgia from a country whose Atlantic empire had been shrinking for decades. Brazil was long gone, and the 1890 British Ultimatum had recently forced Portugal to abandon territorial ambitions in southern Africa, leaving India as perhaps the most emotionally freighted symbol in the national memory.
Casa da Moeda struck the series in multiple denominations. The 500 Reis sits at the practical center of the issue — circulated enough to see real use, commemorative enough to survive in quantity.
Issued to mark the 400th anniversary of Vasco da Gama's arrival on the Malabar Coast in 1498, this coin was part of Portugal's broader commemorative program alongside the celebrated Vasco da Gama Exhibition in Lisbon — a deliberate act of imperial nostalgia from a country whose Atlantic empire had been shrinking for decades. Brazil was long gone, and the 1890 British Ultimatum had recently forced Portugal to abandon territorial ambitions in southern Africa, leaving India as perhaps the most emotionally freighted symbol in the national memory.
Casa da Moeda struck the series in multiple denominations. The 500 Reis sits at the practical center of the issue — circulated enough to see real use, commemorative enough to survive in quantity.