Spain: silver 2-reales of Philip V, 1723-A, Madrid mint, with unknown counterstamp Spain, 2 reales of Philip V, 1723-A. KM 296, Numista-6841. Madrid mint (crowned "M" mintmark). 26 mm, .903 silver. Obverse: crowned arms. Reverse: cross with castles and lions in angles, within octolobe. The coin is heavily worn with an old crease, but has an intriguing small counterstamp of unknown origin on the obverse (shield) side. This mark is an incuse scalloped rectangle with two unknown characters inside. (Perhaps two letters, or a crowned letter? It might be upside-down in my photos.) Ex-WNC Coins, Asheville, NC, USA, June 2019. Found in a small bulk silver lot along with some other well-worn old Spanish silver that I found intriguing.
Actually, that IS an eligible prize option in my giveaway. I should be doing the drawing for Giveaway #53 on 3/21/21. If it goes unchosen by this month's winner, well... it will be a prize option in next month's giveaway, too!
I got it for just a few bucks (essentially melt), since it and some other slick Spanish silver (and a decent piece or two!) were all in a small handful I bought around melt value, in my best friend's North Carolina coin shop. I'd love to solve the mystery of that counterstamp. That could potentially increase the value considerably. (Or not, but it's still interesting, regardless.)
It looks somewhat like the crowned G used during the British occupation of Guadeloupe... but none of the listed types in Gadoury match this...
Looks like an inkblot to me. I can't figure out what I'm seeing. This exact thought crossed my mind as well (note I mentioned in my description that it could be a "crowned letter"). And that would be really cool. But I just can't parse out enough of the object(s) inside that mark to know. *shrugs*
Were there any Spanish Philip V coins with his portrait on them ? He did have his portrait on some Naples and Sicilian coins.
I’m pretty sure there were, but can’t recall any specific examples off the top of my head. Surely on the gold at least, I would think?
Interesting coin! These silver coins were known as "pistareens" and circulated in the American colonies. The counterstamp could be from a silversmith indicating that the coin is "good". Here's one without a counterstamp: Spain two reales 1725 Madrid mint Silver, 23 mm, 5.12 gm
Luchtaine, one of the French members on CollecOnline, commented that he thinks the counterstamp could be Arabic, and said: I hadn’t considered that possibility.
Interesting countermark, lordmarcovan. It rings a faint bell - I used to be a very enthusiastic countermark collector. Although I never owned one like that, I do believe I saw some over the years. Sorry I can't be of any help in identifying it. Your post inspired me to photograph some of my Azores countermarks. These have been extensively counterfeited, so no guarantee of authenticity. These have been in my collection 20+ years, so they pre-date the current run of outrageous fakes, but I think the fakes were around in the 1960s. As I am no expert, I am sure some of mine are fakes, perhaps the two posted below (although I am fairly confident the host coins are geniune). The genuine "crowned G.P" countermark was applied by Portuguese authorities in the Azores in 1887 in an effort to bring monetary order to the wide variety of foreign coins circulating in the islands at that time. Since sailing ships from all over stopped there on the Atlantic voyages, lots of coins wound up there from all over. The Spanish mint 1 and 2 reales ("pistareens") seem to be the most common host coin for these - in circulation for over a 100 years in some cases, these were lower-quality silver than Spanish Colonial small silver of the same vintage, so they stayed in circulation (Gresham's Law strikes again)> Philip V of 1721: A somewhat scarce King Luis type, 1724: