Doubloon

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Spanish gold 4-doubloon coin (8 escudos) stamped as minted in 1798. Obverse: Carol.IIII.D.G. Hisp.et Ind.R. Reverse:.in.utroq.felix. .auspice.deo.fm.

The doubloon (from Spanish doblón, meaning "double"), was a two-escudo or 32-reales gold coin, weighing 6.77 grams (0.218 troy ounces). Doubloons were minted in Spain, Mexico, Peru, and Nueva Granada. The term was first used to describe the golden excelente either because of its value of two ducats or because of the double portrait of Ferdinand and Isabella.

Doubloons marked "2 S" are equivalent to $4 in US gold coins and were traded in that manner. Small 1/2 Escudo coins (similar to a US $1 gold piece) have no value on them but were worth a Spanish Milled Dollar in trade.

In Spain, doubloons were current up to the middle of the 19th century. Isabella II of Spain replaced an escudo-based coinage with decimal reales in 1859, and replaced the 6.77 gram doblón with a new heavier doblón worth 100 reales and weighing 8.3771 grams (0.268 troy ounces). The last Spanish doubloons (showing the denomination as 80 reales) were minted in 1849. After their independence, the former Spanish colonies Mexico, Peru and Nueva Granada continued to mint doubloons.

Doubloons have also been minted in Portuguese colonies, where they went by the name dobrão, with the same meaning.

In Europe the doubloon became the model for several other gold coins, including the French Louis d'or, the Italian doppia, the Swiss duplone, the Northern German pistole, and the Prussian Friedrich d'or.

Popular culture

  • In New Orleans, Louisiana and Mobile, Alabama, "doubloons," usually made of aluminum, have been thrown by Mardi Gras carnival krewes since 1959, when the Rex Krewe reportedly first used them.
  • In Raymond Chandler's novel The High Window, Phillip Marlowe is initially hired by Mrs. Murdock to locate a coin owned by her late husband, the "Brasher Doubloon", every owner of which has been murdered.
  • In the first Hardy Boys novel, The Tower Treasure (1927), Applegate's treasure is a chest of "gold doubloons." This theme reoccurred in a Disney serial, "The Hardy Boys and the Applegate Treasure" (part of The Mickey Mouse Club in 1955), in which "gold doubloons" are extensively featured.
  • In the online game Neopets, "Dubloons" are rare coins found around the world and can be used on Krawk Island.
  • In the board game Puerto Rico, doubloons are used as currency.
  • The plot of the novel Biggles Flies West, by Captain W. E. Johns revolves around a cursed doubloon.
  • In the Spongebob Squarepants episode 'Ghoul Fools', the ghosts who inhabit the haunted houseboat use doubloons as currency.
  • In "Jake and the Neverland Pirates", the crew earns Gold Doubloons for solving pirate problems.
  • On the 4th of July Weekend of 2013 in Port Austin, MI, Marc Mercer negotiated a proposal in Lake Huron to purchase a "beast in the back" in exchange for Doubloons. The trade was denied.
  • In Suits Season 1 Episode 4: "Dirty Little Secrets" - Harvey Specter: "Can't I'm busy this weekend. I have to break into Fort Knox. I have to return some dubloons I stole".
  • In Futurama episode Godfellas, Season 3 Episode 4, Space Pirate says: "Electronically transfer you space Doubloons, afore I send thee to Davey Jarg's locker".

See also

References

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