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Zacatecas 2 Reales
Mexico
1732–1821
Reference data compiled from public catalogs
Estimated Melt Value
$15.77
Based on Silver spot price ($80.24/oz) · 90.3% purity · 6.77g
Updated 2:32 AM
Collector premium not included
Specifications
| Country | Mexico |
| Years Minted | 1732–1821 |
| Composition | 0.903 silver |
| Weight | 6.77 g |
| Diameter | 27 mm |
| Shape | Round |
| Edge | Plain |
Design
Obverse
Features the royal coat of arms of Spain.
Reverse
Depicts the Pillars of Hercules surrounded by waves and the motto PLUS VLTRA.
History & Notable Facts
Zacatecas 2 Reales coins were struck from silver mined in the nearby Zacatecas hills, a key source that bankrolled Spain's empire for decades.
That silver arrived at the mint in raw ingots, often mixed with impurities that assayers had to refine on site. The coins themselves bore the standard design: a crowned shield on one side, the Pillars of Hercules on the other, with dates and mint marks squeezed in around the edges. Variations in the assayer's initials tell us who was in charge that year, though records for many strikes are spotty. We know production ramped up after 1732, but exact figures? Lost to time, probably in some bureaucratic fire.
Don't bother with the myth that these coins cursed their owners. They were just currency, plain and functional. As for me, after thirty years, I've seen enough to know they're solid examples of colonial minting, nothing more.
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