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1681 Consolacion Shipwreck Recovered Potosi Silver Cob 1 Real, ROBCAR Cert.

$ 43.29

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Certification: ROBCAR
  • Condition: Original uncleaned "greenie"
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Composition: Silver
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Circulated
  • Denomination: 1 Real
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Bolivia

    Description

    Auction Title:
    1681 Consolacion Shipwreck Recovered Potosi Silver Cob 1 Real, ROBCAR Cert.
    Description:
    This listing is for a 1681 Consolacion Shipwreck Recovered Potosi Silver Cob 1 Real. The coin is an original uncleaned "greenie." The coin weighs 1.80 grams and includes the original ROBCAR certificate. Free shipping in the U.S., satisfaction is guaranteed.
    Information About the 1681 Consolacion Shipwreck
    When salvage first began on this wreck in 1997, it was initially believed to be the Santa Cruz and later called El Salvador y San José, sunk in August of 1680; however, research by Robert Marx after the main find in subsequent years confirmed its proper name and illuminated its fascinating history.
    Intended to be part of the Spanish “South Seas Fleet” of 1681, which left Lima’s port of Callao in April, the Consolación apparently was delayed and ended up traveling alone. At the Gulf of Guayaquil, off modern-day Ecuador, the Consolación encountered English pirates, led by Bartholomew Sharpe, who forced the Spanish galleon to sink on a reef off Santa Clara Island (later nicknamed “Isla de Muerto,” or Dead Man’s Island). Before the pirates could get to the ship, the crew set fire to her and tried to escape to the nearby island without success. Angered by their inability to seize the valuable cargo of the Consolación, Sharpe’s men killed the Spaniards and tried in vain to recover the treasure through the efforts of local fishermen. Spanish attempts after that were also fruitless, so the treasure of the Consolación sat undisturbed until our time.
    When vast amounts of silver coins were found in the area starting in the 1990s, by local entrepreneurs Roberto Aguirre and Carlos Saavedra (“ROBCAR”) and the government of Ecuador in 1997 under mutual agreement, the exact name and history of the wreck were unknown, and about 8,000 of the coins (all Potosí silver cobs) were subsequently sold at auction by Spink New York in December 2001 as simply “Treasures from the ‘Isla de Muerto.’” Later, after the provenance had been properly researched and the shipwreck was shown to be the Consolacion accompanying certificates were issued for each coin. Ongoing salvage efforts have good reason to be hopeful, as the manifest of the Consolación stated the value of her registered cargo as 146,000 pesos in silver coins in addition to silver and gold ingots, plus an even higher sum in contraband, according to custom.
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