anyone know of a copper Spanish Colonial coin....

...with a Spanish cross on the face of it?? Kinda like the thicker Spanish crosses of 1600s-early 1700s silver cob coins of Peru and Bolivia? I
have a copper coin ---about the diameter of a U.S nickel, not thick (but not thinnly hammered either)-- with such a Spanish cross on it. The
coins is SUPER worn but I THINK I detect the shape of castles and lions in the angles of the cross. The reverse is too worn to make out
anything.
Does this resemble such a coin anyone has ever seen?? Were any such copper Latin American coins ever struck?? Spain, as in homeland
Spain, never struck any copper coins with that kind of Spanish cross.
have a copper coin ---about the diameter of a U.S nickel, not thick (but not thinnly hammered either)-- with such a Spanish cross on it. The
coins is SUPER worn but I THINK I detect the shape of castles and lions in the angles of the cross. The reverse is too worn to make out
anything.
Does this resemble such a coin anyone has ever seen?? Were any such copper Latin American coins ever struck?? Spain, as in homeland
Spain, never struck any copper coins with that kind of Spanish cross.
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Comments
Gary
Though I can't prove it (particularly with those photos as evidence- I know it's tough to image something so smooth), I'll hang my hat on the theory that you've got a maravedis-denominated copper of some kind which was struck as a copper coin and never as a counterfeit of some silver piece.
<< <i>I do believe there were some copper maravedis struck with the cross design, perhaps in the 17th century or so, but I could be mistaken. (There are probably a lot of types not in Krause).
Though I can't prove it (particularly with those photos as evidence- I know it's tough to image something so smooth), I'll hang my hat on the theory that you've got a maravedis-denominated copper of some kind which was struck as a copper coin and never as a counterfeit of some silver piece. >>
Yes, the spanish tried to introduce copper coins in Mexico & Santa Domingo in the 16th century
the maravedis were long accepted in Spain itself, but the Mexicans and Dominicans didn't accept copper coins
for payment, copper was inferior in their eyes.
2 - 4 and 11 maravedis were made and a small 1/2 maravedi known as a ""blanca""
all these coins are considered extremely rare
(The practical Book of Cobs by Daniel & Frank Sedwick)
I would mail him the pics of your cob, incl weight & Diameter
www.sedwickcoins.com