The Pesos Minted in the Indies
- México from 1535 to 1821
- Lima from 1565 to 1824
- Potosí from 1574 to 1825
- Santa Fe de Bogotá from 1622 to 1821
- Guatemala from 1733 to 1821
- Popayán from 1758 to 1822
- Santiago de Chile from 1749 to 1817
Source: Glenn Murray


The Royal Mint. Aerial photo. Author: José Luis Martín Mayoral
The First Global Currency in History I
The First Global Currency in History II
A multitude of countries used the Peso or the Spanish Dollar as legal tender across the globe, not only those close to Spain like Portugal or England. Resold Spanish Dollars, bearing the seals of what we might call the “central banks” of the time, have been found in countries as far removed from Spain’s sphere of influence as Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Zanzibar, and Burma.
Following the civil wars that led to the independence of the former viceroyalties, the new republics continued to use the coin, and some even still use the name Peso for their official currency.
In China, it was accepted as legal tender until Mao removed it from circulation after the Communist revolution in 1949.
For over 80 years, it was the primary currency of the United States after its independence.
A timeless monetary symbol?
A possible explanation for the expression "to overlook..."
All European trading companies, which at times were privateers, other times smugglers, and sometimes honest merchants, came to Spain to acquire their Reales de a Ocho or raw silver if they wanted to trade across the world, particularly in the East. Companies such as the Dutch East India Company, the Dutch West India Company, the British East India Company, and later the French East India Company, would arrive with their ships in Cádiz to obtain the reference currency in that part of the world, whether legally… or more or less legally…
Smuggling was always one of the problems of the Carrera de Indias, and it is believed that the expression “pasar por alto” (to overlook) comes from when ships loaded with silver would “pass by the walls of Cádiz”, under the cover of night and with the complicity of those meant to be guarding, certain undeclared goods, including silver and dyes.

Author: Carlos Parrilla Penagos