De a Ocho Reales (Pieces-of-Eight)
Toward the end of the sixteenth century, Spanish coins,
particularly the de a ocho reales, had become the international currency
and held that position until eclipsed by the pound sterling in the nineteenth
century. The pieces of eight was the immediate forerunner of the United States
dollar.
The pieces of eight, called the Spanish dollar in the United States, was
equal to eight reales, a Spanish monetary unit. Reales was a word
for “royal” in Spanish. Today the monetary unit of account in Saudi Arabia is
called the riyal, and in Oman and Yemen the monetary unit is the
rial, both derivatives of the real. Spanish coins dominated Far
Eastern trade, Mediterranean trade, and trade with the New World.
The Spanish real, a silver coin, came into existence in 1497 with the
monetary reform of Ferdinand and Isabella, the Spanish monarchs who financed
Columbus’s voyage to the New World. Originally, the real consisted of
one-sixty-seventh of a mark of silver and was coined in multiples, quadruples,
and octuples (the piece of eight reals), and in fractions of a real. The real
was sometimes called a bit. The pieces of eight were eight bits. A fourth
of a real equaled two bits, a half a real equaled four bits, and three-fourths
of a real equaled six bits. The division of the dollar into bits lives on in the
cheer-leading yell that can be heard at any high school football game, “Two
bits, four bits, six bits, a dollar, all for the [name of team] stand up and
holler.” Ferdinand’s and Isabella’s monetary reform set out to provide Spain
with a unified coinage system. Charles V popularized the pieces of eight, equal
to the Bohemian or Saxon thaler, which gave its name to the United States
dollar.
Mints in Mexico City and Peru turned out vast quantities of Spanish reals.
Mexico City boasted of the largest mint in the world, and minted a
pieces-of-eight coin called the pillar dollar, because of its symbol on the
obverse side denoting the Pillars of Hercules, the strait that opens the
Mediterranean into the Atlantic Ocean. The dollar sign “$” may have originated
from this symbol of the Pillars of Hercules with the “S” portion a reference to
a banner hanging from one pillar.
Mexico, after winning independence from Spain in 1821, minted its own
peso with a bit more silver than the old Spanish pieces of eight. The new
Mexican peso was called the Mexican dollar in Far Eastern trade, where it
was the most popular coin throughout the nineteenth century, competing with the
U.S. silver trade dollar and a British silver trade dollar. Spanish pieces of
eight and Mexican pesos were legal tender in the United State in much of the
pre-Civil War era. Mexico remained on a silver standard while most of the world
adopted the gold standard, and Mexican silver pesos remained important in Far
Eastern trade. During the Great Depression of the 1930s Mexico abandoned the
silver standard, just as the United States abandoned the gold standard.
With the loss of Mexican silver, and the European shift toward the gold
standard after 1875, Spanish coinage receded into the background as
international currency.
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