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8 Reales - Ferdinand VII Countermark on Argentina 8 Reales

发行方 Philippines
年份 1832-1834
类型 Emergency coin
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正面描述 The obverse displays the coat of arms of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata set within a wreath of laurel and oak branches tied at the base, the shield containing a crossed staff and pike topped with a Phrygian liberty cap over a rising sun motif. The denomination 8 and mintmaster initial F flank the wreath to left and right respectively, with the host date 1815 and assayer initial H appearing in the lower field. The circular legend EN UNION Y LIBERTAD runs along the periphery. Superimposed at center is the Philippine countermark, an incuse oval punch bearing a crowned royal cypher F.7.o, applied by Philippine authorities between 1832 and 1834 to validate the host coin for local circulation.
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背面描述 The reverse presents a bold radiant sun in full face, featuring alternating straight and wavy rays emanating from a plain circular central disc, occupying the entire field of the coin. The circular legend PROVINCIAS DEL RIO DE LA PLATA is inscribed along the periphery, with a small six-pointed star ornament at the base. The design is characteristic of the early Argentine republican coinage struck at the Potosi Mint, rendered in high relief against a flat field.
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附加信息

The Philippines lacked sufficient minted coinage through much of the early nineteenth century and relied heavily on countermarked foreign silver to fill the gap. Spanish colonial 8 reales circulating in the archipelago were officially authenticated by applying the crowned F7 stamp — authorizing them as legal tender under Ferdinand VII. The host coins in this variety originated from the nascent Argentine mint at Buenos Aires, itself only operational from 1813 onward, meaning the window for eligible planchets was narrow.

KM#44.2 distinguishes the countermark applied to Argentine hosts specifically, as opposed to the more prevalent Mexican or Peruvian silver that dominates the series.

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