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1 Peso

Issuer Cuba
Year 1992-2022
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Orientation Coin alignment ↑↓
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Reverse description A facing portrait of José Julián Martí Pérez (1853–1895), Cuban patriot and independence leader, is centered in the field. The curved motto PATRIA O MUERTE (Fatherland or Death) arcs along the upper legend, while the denomination is expressed as the numeral 1 with the word PESO superimposed upon it, positioned to the left of the portrait. The design is enclosed within an endecagonal (11-sided) inner border with a beaded rim, consistent with the obverse treatment.
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Reverse lettering PATRIA O MUERTE 1 PESO
(Translation: Fatherland or Death 1 Peso)
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Additional information

Cuba introduced this brass-plated steel peso in 1992 as a cost-cutting measure following the collapse of Soviet subsidies, which had been propping up the island's economy to the tune of roughly $4–6 billion annually. The loss of that support triggered the "Special Period in Time of Peace" — a government euphemism for severe austerity — and the coinage system was quietly debased as part of broader monetary contraction.

The dual-currency system that ran alongside this issue, separating CUP from the convertible CUC peso, was formally abolished in January 2021.

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