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Pirate Coin Sunken Treasure Piece of Eight Hand-struck Authentic 1/2R SS/14K

$ 263.47

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Year: 1710
  • Certification: Registration No. 17232-R
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Denomination: 1/2 Reale
  • Condition: Sunken Treasure! Excellent Salvaged Condition! Authentic Hand-struck Spanish piece of eight coin dated 1710 set into a handcrafted sterling silver pendant bezel accented with solid 14K gold prongs. Unique Shape!
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Sunken Treasure! Excellent salvaged condition. The authentic Spanish silver piece of eight coin pendant pictured is the one you will receive. It is set into a handcrafted sterling silver pendant bezel accented with solid 14K gold prongs. Your purchase includes the Certificate of Authenticity, polishing cloth, velvet pouch and gift box.
    This type
    of coin is unique in its shape and striking,
    therefore no two of these coins will ever be exactly the same
    . Yet, amazingly, for each denomination, the weight is almost exactly the same. They were hand-made, mostly by the indigenous Indians of the New World, cut from the end of a refined silver bar, then clipped,
    heated, and hand struck between two crudely made engraved dies. They were then
    filed to the exact requisite weight
    of silver, according to the denomination.  They made them in denominations of 1/2, 1, 2, 4, and 8 Reales and they were called
    "Pieces of Eight"
    or Cob coins (meaning end of the bar)
    .
    Depending on the mint and the era, the obverse bears the Coat of Arms of the reigning Spanish King or the Pillars of Hercules over the waves of the sea with the Latin warning: PLUS ULTRA meaning, "Spain owns all that is beyond the oceans". The reverse usually has, in varying styles, a Jerusalem cross.
    This
    coin was recovered from the
    "Rimac"
    river in Lima, Peru. The river was the
    transportation from the silver mines in the New World
    to the ocean where they were then
    loaded onto the treasure galleons to be sent back to the Old World.
    For a period of several hundred years, residents and
    sailors would toss in a coin for safe passage or good fortune.
    Over the centuries, the mud banks of the river have captured and preserved thousands of Spanish silver coins.