1677 US. DUTCH COLONIAL SILVER LEG DOLLAR! Silver Ducat Zeeland mint

DUTCH COLONIAL SILVER LEG DOLLAR! 

1677 Silver Dukaat Dollar, Zeeland Mint!

Early American colonies where the Daalder was the first silver dollar

HENRY HUDSON DISCOVERED MANHATTAN ON SEPTEMBER 11, 1609 AND EXPLORED MAINE, CAPE COD AND SAILED SOME DISTANCE UP THE HUDSON RIVER, WHICH NOW BEARS HIS NAME. THE DUTCH WOULD LATER CLAIM THIS AREA AND ESTABLISH A COLONY AS NEW AMSTERDAM, THOUGH IT IS SAID THAT HUDSON HIMSELF GAVE THE NAME STATEN ISLAND (DUTCH: STAATEN EYLANDT) TO THAT PART OF WHAT IS NOW NEW YORK, IN HONOR OF THE STATES-GENERAL OR PARLIAMENT OF THE NETHERLANDS.

This coin is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity!



 
SPECIFICATIONS
Denomination Daalder/ Dollar
Alloy Silver 873
Type Struck
Diameter 38 mm
Thickness 2.8 mm


Weight 27.6 grams
Shape Round
Edge Plain
Mint Province
  Zeeland
 
   

Dutch Colonial Silver Lion Dollar, $24 bought Manhattan
This amazing Silver dollar coin was minted over 350 years ago and is similar to the ones used by the Dutch in the era when they bought the island of Manhattan (present-day New York City) for the equivalent of $24 in Dutch dollar coins. These were brought to the colonies by the Dutch when they settled in New Amsterdam , now New York. This is an historical coin and it would make a great addition to your collection.

Obverse:  MON ¤ NOV ¤ ARG ¤ PRO ¤ CONFOE ¤ BELG ¤ ZEL ¤
Reverse:  CONCORDIA ¤ RES PARVAE ¤ CRESCUNT ¤ 1677

OBVERSE:

 

 

 

 

Obverse : MON. NOV. ARG.PRO.CONFOE.BELG. ZEL. This abbreviated Latin legend may be transcribed as: MONETA NOVA ARGENTEA PROVINCIARUM CONFOEDERATUM BELGICARUM ZEELAND which translates as "Coin New Silver of the Province of the Confederation Belgium - Zeeland".
The obverse depicted a standing soldier in full armor with a sword in his right hand. In his left hand the soldier held straps that were attached to the crowned provincial shield which was displayed in front of him. The shield completely obscured the soldier's left leg so the picture looked like a soldier with one leg, hence the name "leg dollar."

REVERSE:

 

The reverse displayed the crowned arms of the United Netherlands. the Latin legend CONCORDIA ¤ RES PARVAE ¤ CRESCUNT expands to Concordia Res Parvae Crescunt which translates as "In harmony, small things grow."

 

The Leg Dollar (Zilveren Dukaat)

The Leg Dollar or silver ducat (Zilveren Dukaat), having a number of varieties, was produced in all seven provinces, in the region of West Frisia, and in three of the cities with minting privileges as follows:

Leg Dollar Issues - Provinces:
Frisia: 1659-1698
Gelderland: 1659-1795
Groningen: 1683
Holland: 1659-1772
Overijssel: 1659-1795
Utrecht: 1659-1795
Zeeland: 1659-1795

Leg Dollar Issues - Regions
West Frisia: 1659-1795
Leg Dollar Issues - Cities
Deventer: 1662-1698
Kampen: 1659-1693
Zwolle: 1656-1669

Notes:
Zeeland - As with the 1597-1598 Lion Dollars and the Rix Dollars from Zeeland, the lower half of the provincial shield is covered by ocean waves.

 

Dutch Coinage Types Found in the American Colonies

The seven United Provinces of the Netherlands each had the right to mint coins, these included: Holland, Overijssel, Zeeland, Gelderland, Groningen, Utrecht and Frisia. Additionally minting privileges were also extended to the region of West Frisia (which was part of the province of Holland) and the cities of Deventer, Groningen, Kampen, Nijmegen, Zutphen and Zwolle.

Below are listed the minting locations for the major Dutch coinage types found in the American colonies: lion dollars, rix dollars, leg dollars and silver rider ducatoons. Also appended is a listing of other crown size silver coins minted in the Netherlands during this era. The dates reflect the first and last year of issue rather than a complete record of minting years.

Although not as prominent as the lion dollar, the ducatoon and the rix dollar were often encountered in Seventeenth century colonial America. They were regularly used in the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam and spread outward as Dutch trade with other colonies increased. On September 27, 1642 the Massachusetts General Court decreed that due to the frequency of trade with the Dutch colony they were establishing a standard rate of exchange for the ducatoon and rix dollar; the ducatoon would pass at a value of 6 shillings and the rix dollar would be put on par with the Spanish eight reales at a value of 5 shillings. Similarly, in 1686 the colony of Maryland standardized the ducatoon at 7s6d and put the rix dollar on par with the French ¨¦cu and the Spanish eight reales at a value of 6 shillings.

A large silver coin called a ducatone was first minted in the Spanish Netherlands, in Brabant and Tournai, in 1618 and continued to be produced throughout the century. The coin contained 501.23 grains of .944 fine silver, valued at 60 sols (which was equivalent to three guilders or 60 stuivers), and contained a a bust of the ruler on the obverse and the royal heraldic shield on the reverse. From 1659 through 1794 a coin of similar size and value was minted in each of the seven northern United Provinces (what we call the Netherlands). The Dutch coin, known as a Dukaton, was slightly heavier at 505.86 grains but with slightly less pure silver at .941 fineness. This Dukaton of Zilveren Rijder was called a "silver rider" in the American colonies, as the obverse depicted an soldier in full armor wielding a sword on horseback with the provincial heraldic shield below while on the reverse was the crowned arms of the United Netherlands held up by two crowned lions. In the colonies this coin was referred to as a ducatoon and became the predominant coin of the Dutch East Indies during the Eighteenth century.

The Nederlandse Rijksdaalder, known in the colonies as the "rix dollar," was actually a variety of different coins each averaging about 448 grains in weight of .885 fine silver. These coins were independently minted by individual cities or provinces in the United Netherlands and passed at a value of two and a half guilders (50 stuivers). Usually the obverse of the coin had a half portrait of the ruler (often with a drawn sword) while the reverse displayed an heraldic shield. Additionally, several German and Scandinavian cities minted similar coins, known as thalers in their native areas but called "rix dollars of the Empire" by the English. The "Empire" refers to the loose confederation of German states know jointly as the Holy Roman Empire. In 1702 Isaac Newton assayed thirteen different rix dollars from German cities and found they averaged 441.96 grains at .886 fine silver, which was about the same as the Dutch coins. It appears all of these various coins were called rix dollars in the American colonies.

Starting in the 1650's and continuing throughout 1795 another silver coin was produced, a slightly smaller silver ducat of 28.25 grams at .873 fine silver valued at 48 stuivers. This coin was sometimes used in the American colonies where it passed at the same rate as the rix dollar and was know as the "leg dollar." The obverse depicted a standing soldier in full armor with a sword in his right hand. In his left hand the soldier held straps that were attached to the crowned provincial shield which was displayed in front of him. The shield completely obscured the soldier's left leg so the picture looked like a soldier with one leg, hence the name "leg dollar." The reverse displayed the crowned arms of the United Netherlands.

Although not as widespread as Spanish silver or the lion dollar, the silver rider ducatoon and various rix dollars were certainly familiar in the colonies throughout the Seventeenth and into the early Eighteenth century, with the leg dollar seeing some limited circulation during the Eighteenth century.

 

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