I added an 1888 Argentina Gold 5 Pesos to my collection. The gold coin is as large as the 1/4 oz American Gold Eagle! It is 90% gold, weight 8.0g grams and is 22.12mm.
Even though I’ve handled many coins over the years, this one still managed to make me feel like a beginner again. Not with the coin itself... that part I understand, but with Argentina. I realized I’ve somehow collected coins from many countries, yet this is my first gold piece from Argentina.
I know the usual things everyone knows: tango, steak, Maradona, and of course that dramatic “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina”. But not much beyond that. So when this 19th-century coin showed up, it felt like I had to have it, other than the fact that it is 1888. Some of you know I collect 1888 coins.
The design is familiar enough... Liberty, coat of arms, all the classic symbolism, but the context behind it isn’t something I’ve ever really explored.
The edge is engraved with raised stars and letters in Latin and translated to mean "Equality before the law".
I found myself reading about Argentina in the late 1800s, a country building railroads, attracting immigrants, and trying to define its identity. The more I read, the more I realized how much was happening there during the year this little gold coin was minted. Argentina was basically in the middle of a growth spurt, the kind where a country tries to figure out who it wants to be while everything is moving at full speed.
Railroads were popping up everywhere, and people were arriving from Europe in huge numbers, bringing their languages, their food, their habits.
Argentina wanted to be seen as one of the rising powers, not some chaotic place on the edge of the map. So the government pushed for things that signaled stability, like a stronger economy, a national identity that made sense, and yes, a solid currency backed by gold. Coins like this 1888 Gold 5 Pesos were part of that image.
Current coin listing on Ebay of the same year date:
Somehow, all of that energy is wrapped up in this one coin. It’s not just gold; it’s a snapshot of a country mid‑transformation. I didn’t expect to care about any of this. But once you start reading, it’s hard not to picture the world this coin came from.
It makes the coin feel less like an object and more like a tiny time capsule.
Meanwhile, I’m sitting here trying to figure out how I’ve collected coins for years without ever touching an Argentinian coin.
Reference
https://en.numista.com/25417
https://www.ebay.com/itm/227310950241?_skw
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