COLONIAL ERA SPAIN. Philip IV, 1621-1665. Countermarked “Pirate Cob”, NGC XF45

$185.00

COLONIAL ERA SPAIN. Philip IV, 1621-1665. Countermarked “Pirate Cob”, NGC XF45

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Description

COLONIAL ERA SPAIN. Philip IV, 1621-1665. Countermarked “Pirate Cob”, NGC XF45

Spanish Colonial silver cob from the reign of Philip IV (1621–1665) with a later “Pirate Cob” countermark, certified by NGC as XF45. Here’s how to interpret that description and why it’s interesting:

1. The Host Coin: Philip IV Cob (1621–1665)

  • Ruler: Philip IV of Spain

  • Era: Height of the Spanish Empire, massive silver output from the New World

  • Mints: Commonly Potosí, Mexico City, Lima, or Bogotá

  • Type: Hand-struck cob (irregular flan, crude but bold design)

  • Metal: Silver (typically 1, 2, 4, or 8 reales)

  • Design elements:

    • Obverse: Spanish shield (often partially visible)

    • Reverse: Cross with castles and lions

These were the backbone of global trade and are the classic “pieces of eight.”

2. The Countermark: “Pirate Cob”

  • Countermarking was common in the Caribbean and surrounding regions where coins circulated heavily.

  • The term “Pirate Cob” is a modern collector designation, not a contemporary one.

  • Such countermarks are often attributed to:

    • Local validation for circulation in pirate havens or colonial outposts

    • Emergency currency authorization in areas lacking official coin supply

    • Later romanticized associations with piracy and privateering

  • NGC recognizes certain countermarks as authentic and historical, which adds legitimacy and value.

3. Grade: NGC XF45

  • XF (Extremely Fine) is a strong grade for a cob, especially one that’s countermarked.

  • Indicates:

    • Bold remaining design details

    • Clear countermark impression

    • Honest circulation wear without major damage

Additional information

Weight 0.01 kg
Dimensions 30 × 10 × 0.1 cm

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