Sint Maarten's chronic coin shortage in the late eighteenth century was not unique in the Caribbean, but the island's solution was characteristically pragmatic: foreign silver already in circulation was countermarked and given a local valuation rather than waiting on metropolitan supply. The 1797 countermarking program applied two stamps — one for each century of mark, hence the C17 and C18 designation — to coins already bearing an earlier countermark, meaning many specimens carry the accumulated bureaucratic history of two separate revaluations on a single host coin.
The host coin varies, which complicates attribution. KM#11.1 specifically covers the double-countermarked variety on Spanish colonial eight-reales hosts, though pieces on other hosts are documented under related CNO numbers.
Sint Maarten's chronic coin shortage in the late eighteenth century was not unique in the Caribbean, but the island's solution was characteristically pragmatic: foreign silver already in circulation was countermarked and given a local valuation rather than waiting on metropolitan supply. The 1797 countermarking program applied two stamps — one for each century of mark, hence the C17 and C18 designation — to coins already bearing an earlier countermark, meaning many specimens carry the accumulated bureaucratic history of two separate revaluations on a single host coin.
The host coin varies, which complicates attribution. KM#11.1 specifically covers the double-countermarked variety on Spanish colonial eight-reales hosts, though pieces on other hosts are documented under related CNO numbers.