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Object of the month for May 2011 Each month we will feature a different item relating to the Museum with a unique story to tell. Piece of Eight 1677 Image copyright Museum of London This month we celebrate the opening of Pirates: The Captain Kidd Story by sharing with you a classic object associated with all things pirate, a genuine piece of eight that will be on display in the exhibition. This coin was recovered from the wreck of a Spanish ship, the Santa Maria de la Consolación. In 1681 she was carrying coins, silver and gold bars for Panama when she was sighted by the pirate Bartholomew Roberts.

Object of the Month May 2011

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Object of the month for May 2011

Each month we will feature a different item relating to the Museum with a uniquestory to tell.

Piece of Eight 1677

Image copyright Museum of London

This month we celebrate the opening of Pirates: The Captain Kidd Story by sharingwith you a classic object associated with all things pirate, a genuine piece of eightthat will be on display in the exhibition.

This coin was recovered from the wreck of a Spanish ship, the Santa Maria de laConsolación.

In 1681 she was carrying coins, silver and gold bars for Panama when she wassighted by the pirate Bartholomew Roberts.

8/7/2019 Object of the Month May 2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/object-of-the-month-may-2011 2/2

He gave chase but she ran aground on Santa Clara Island, Ecuador, and waswrecked.

The legendary pieces of eight were made of silver mined by enslaved people fromthe Potosi Mountain mine in Bolivia.

From the late 1500s the Spanish shipped silver and gold from the mine to Spain via

Panama.

These valuable shipments attracted the attention of pirates from Sir Francis Drakeonwards.

The silver was made into crude bars and chopped into rough disks. Shears werethen used to cut the disks to roughly the right size. They were then stamped with thefeatures you see here.

Because the dies (metal stamps) wore out quickly, many pieces of eight often lookedpoorly made.

Uncover more from the high seas when our exhibition opens on the 20 May 2011.