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Nuestra Senora de Atocha Shipwreck Reale silver coin grade 3

$ 686.4

Availability: 35 in stock
  • Certification: Uncertified
  • Composition: Silver
  • Denomination: Real
  • Year: 1617
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Spain
  • Condition: WEIGHT 25.8 FROM 1985 SALVAGE- FRAMED

    Description

    Authentic  Atocha  Silver Coin, Grade 3 , 8 Reales IN FRAME FOR PERFECT DISPLAY
    Coin Number:
    85A-206543
    Denomination:
    8 Reales
    Mint:
    Potosi
    Reign:
    Phillip III
    Coin Date:
    ####
    Grade:
    THREE (3)
    Atocha Coin Description
    The term “Atocha Coins” refers to silver and gold Spanish coins recovered from the shipwreck of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha.
    On September 6, 1622, the heavily laden treasure galleon of King Philip IV’s Tierra Firme Fleet struck a reef and sank in a raging storm near the Florida Keys. More than two hundred and sixty persons perished and tons of gold, silver, and other precious cargo were lost to the sea. All attempts to locate the shipwreck failed until the location of the primary cultural deposit was made by Treasure Salvors, Inc., on July 20th 1985.
    The Nuestra Senora de Atocha carried over 200,000 hand stamped silver coins from mints in Potosi, Lima and Mexico City. To date, only 128 gold Atocha coins have been recovered! The gold Atocha coins were minted in Spain, as gold coins were not minted in the New World in 1622. The gold Atocha coins would have been in the pockets and possessions of the wealthy passengers.
    Silver coins are referred to as “pieces of eight” and were measured in reales. Their denominations are 8 reales, 4 reales, 2 reales, 1 real, ½ real and ¼ real. An 8 reales silver Atocha coin was roughly equivalent to one month’s pay for a sailor in the 1600’s.
    Denominations of the Atocha coins were based on the “Onza” or avoirdupois ounce equaling 28 grams. Each denomination was to equal one-half of the next higher denomination. Due to the crude hand-struck minting process, no two coins look alike.
    Gold Atocha coins were measured in escudos and were referred to as “doubloons”. The term dubloon originally came from the word “double” for a two escudo coin. Two pieces of eight (silver) equaled a one-escudo coin or a sixteen-to-one ration between gold and silver bullion. Gold coin denominations are 8 escudo, 4 escudo, 2 escudo and 1 escudo.
    You can purchase your own authentic Atocha - Margarita coin or a reproduction made with a portion of from authentic Atocha silver or gold from the only "official"
    Mel Fisher Family treasure website
    on the internet who are the finders of the Atocha & Margarita shipwrecks! Every Atocha and Margarita historic artifact on the Mel Fisher website can be guaranteed to be authentic and comes with a documented Certificate of Authenticity that can trace the item from the seabed - to our conservation lab - to you.
    NO OTHER "TREASURE" OR "ATOCHA COIN" SITE CAN MAKE THAT CLAIM!