The Real Ingenio de Segovia was the most technically advanced mint in the Spanish Empire at this period — a water-powered mill installation on the Eresma River capable of producing machine-struck coinage when most New World mints were still hand-hammering cobs. Felipe III inherited this operation from his father alongside the entirety of the Habsburg's American silver pipeline, though his reign saw the crown's finances increasingly strained by the costs of the Thirty Years' War buildup and the disastrous expulsion of the Moriscos in 1609-1614, which gutted agricultural productivity across Castile.
Segovia mill-struck pieces from this reign are distinguished from contemporary cob coinage by their regularity — a specificity that made counterfeiting easier, ironically prompting later minting reforms.
The Real Ingenio de Segovia was the most technically advanced mint in the Spanish Empire at this period — a water-powered mill installation on the Eresma River capable of producing machine-struck coinage when most New World mints were still hand-hammering cobs. Felipe III inherited this operation from his father alongside the entirety of the Habsburg's American silver pipeline, though his reign saw the crown's finances increasingly strained by the costs of the Thirty Years' War buildup and the disastrous expulsion of the Moriscos in 1609-1614, which gutted agricultural productivity across Castile.
Segovia mill-struck pieces from this reign are distinguished from contemporary cob coinage by their regularity — a specificity that made counterfeiting easier, ironically prompting later minting reforms.