1759, Kingdom of Spain, Ferdinand VI. Silver 1 Real (½ Cross Pistareen) Coin. F

Mint Year: 1759 Mint Mark: S (Seville) Reference: KM-389.2. Denomination: 1 Real (½ Pistareen) Condition: A few digs, otherwise Fine! Assayers: Jose de Villaviciosa and Vicente Diez de la Fuente (JV) Diameter: 20mm Weight: 2.44gm Material: Silver

Obverse: Cross with castles and lions in angles inside octolobe. Legend: HISPANIARUM * REX * I759 * Translateion: "King of the Spains"

Reverse: Crowned spanish flanked by value, mint and assayer letters. Legend: . FERDINANDUS . VI . D . G . / .R * S. .I-JV. Translateion: "Ferdinand VI. by the Grace of God"

The Oxford English Dictionary says the word "PISTAREEN" is derived from a popular formation of peseta a diminutive of the pesa of weight, that later became peso, the unit of monetary value in Spain, now equivalent to the Spanish dollar. "Pistareen" is both "An American or West Indian name for a small Spanish silver coin formerly current there" or, alternatively, "Concerned with small matters; petty, paltry, picayune." The pistareen to be more specific is a thin, round, silver coin, about the size of a modern day quarter on whose face it proclaims to be worth two reales. Pistareens were minted in Spain from the late 17th to the early 19th century.

Ferdinand VI,  (September 23, 1713 – August 10, 1759), King of Spain from 1746 until  his death, second son of Philip V, founder of the Spanish Bourbon  dynasty (as opposed to the French Bourbons), by his first marriage with  Maria Louisa of Savoy, was born at Madrid on September 23, 1713.

When he came to the throne, Spain found itself in  the War of the Austrian Succession which ended without any benefit to  Spain. He started his reign by eliminating the influence of the widow  Queen Elisabeth of Parma and her group of Italian courtesans. As king  he followed a steady policy of neutrality in the conflict between  France and England, and refused to be tempted by the offers of either  into declaring war on the other.

Prominent figures during his reign were the Marquis  of Ensenada, a Francophile; and José de Carvajal y Lancaster, a  supporter of the alliance with Great Britain. The fight between both  ended in 1754 with the death of Carvajal the fall of Ensenada, making  Ricardo Wall the new powerful man of the monarchy.

The most important tasks during the reign of  Ferdinand VI were carried out by the Marquis of Ensenada, the Secretary  of the Treasury, Navy and Indies. He suggested that the state help  modernize the country. To him, this was necessary to maintain a  position of exterior strength so that France and Great Britain would  consider Spain as an ally without supposing Spain's renunciation of its  claim to Gibraltar.

Among his reform projects were:

     
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    New model of the Treasury suggested by Ensenada in 1749. He proposed substitution of the  traditional taxes with a special tax, the cadastre, that weighed the  economic capacity of each contributor based on their property holdings.  He also proposed a reduction of subsidies to by the state to the Cortes  and the army. The opposition by the nobility caused the abandonment of  the project.
     
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    The creation of the Giro Real in 1752, a bank favoring the transfer of public and private funds  outside of Spain keeping all of the foreign exchanges in the hands of  the Royal Treasury, enriching the State. It is considered the  predecessor to the Bank of San Carlos, introduced during the reign of  Charles III.
     
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    The stimulation of commerce in the Americas,  which tried to end the monopoly in the Indies and eliminate the  injustices of colonial commerce. Thus he leaned toward registered ships  rather than fleets of ships. The new system consisted of the  substitution of the fleets and galleons so that a Spanish ship,  previously authorized, could conduct trade freely in the Americas. This  increased the revenues and decreased the fraud. Even so, this system  provoked many protests among merchants in the private sector.
     
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    The modernization of the Navy.  According to Ensenada, a powerful navy was fundamental to a power with  an overseas empire and aspirations of being respected by France and  Great Britain. He increased the navy's budget and expanded the capacity  of the shipyards of Cádiz, Ferrol, Cartagena and Havana which marked  the starting point of the Spanish naval power in the eighteenth century.
     
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    Church relations which were really tense from start of the reign of Philip V because of  the recognition of Charles VI as the King of Spain by the Pope. A  regalist policy was maintained that pursued as much political as fiscal  objectives and whose decisive achievement was the Concord of 1753. From  this the right of Universal Patronage was obtained from Pope Benedict  XIV, giving important economic benefits to Crown and a great control  over the clergy.
     
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    Cultural advancement. He helped create the Royal Academy of the Fine Arts of San Fernando in 1752. The noted composer Domenico Scarlatti, music teacher to Maria  Barbara, wrote many of his 555 harpsichord sonatas at Ferdinand's  court. Beginning in 1737, the popular castrato singer Farinelli was a  member of the Spanish court, singing for the royal family and  organizing court entertainments, concerts and spectacles.
     

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发布人: anonymous
2019-04-16
 
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