
1808 Mexico 8 Reales Pillar Dollar gFine
The 1808 Mexico 8 Reales is a renowned silver coin minted under Spanish colonial rule, featuring King Charles IV. Often called a "pillar dollar" (though technically not part of the earlier pillar series), it was struck at the Mexico City Mint and widely circulated across the Americas and Asia. Weighing 27.07 grams of .903 fine silver, it played a vital role in global trade and became a model for many future currencies, including the U.S. dollar.
Note: this obverse also features a chopmark. A chop mark is a small stamp punched into a Spanish 8 Reales coin by Asian merchants to verify its authenticity and silver content during trade in the 18th–19th centuries.
Original: $196.75
-65%$196.75
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1808 Mexico 8 Reales Pillar Dollar gFine
The 1808 Mexico 8 Reales is a renowned silver coin minted under Spanish colonial rule, featuring King Charles IV. Often called a "pillar dollar" (though technically not part of the earlier pillar series), it was struck at the Mexico City Mint and widely circulated across the Americas and Asia. Weighing 27.07 grams of .903 fine silver, it played a vital role in global trade and became a model for many future currencies, including the U.S. dollar.
Note: this obverse also features a chopmark. A chop mark is a small stamp punched into a Spanish 8 Reales coin by Asian merchants to verify its authenticity and silver content during trade in the 18th–19th centuries.
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The 1808 Mexico 8 Reales is a renowned silver coin minted under Spanish colonial rule, featuring King Charles IV. Often called a "pillar dollar" (though technically not part of the earlier pillar series), it was struck at the Mexico City Mint and widely circulated across the Americas and Asia. Weighing 27.07 grams of .903 fine silver, it played a vital role in global trade and became a model for many future currencies, including the U.S. dollar.
Note: this obverse also features a chopmark. A chop mark is a small stamp punched into a Spanish 8 Reales coin by Asian merchants to verify its authenticity and silver content during trade in the 18th–19th centuries.
























