Many of the coins are valued in price close to $10 to $15 each. The value of each coin will vary depending upon their condition.
Yes, that is the date the coin was actually minted. All coins of that type have the date 1957 (the issue date for that series) on the obverse and the actually date of mintage in a small star on the reverse. The problem with this design is that the mintage date can easily damaged or erased by wear.
All PTAS coins from 1868-1982 actually have the two dates. The larger one is the date the coin was authorized and the one in the star is the actual date of the coin. Most PTAS sell for around $2.
5 ptas
It should have the country's name on it. Most likely you'll see Espana, which is Spain (in Spanish)
max 10$
From 100 to 700 US dollars
A 5 PTAS coin is short for 5 pesetas, which is what Spain used prior to the Euro. The exact value depends on the date and variety, but for the majority of dates, they're only worth a couple of cents in circulated and a couple of bucks or so in uncirculated condition.
From 100 to 700 US dollars
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Ptas is the abbreviation for pesetas. This is the currency that Spain used before converting over to the euro.
Spain ESPAÑA The 1957 date on the front is only the design date. On the back in a small star (on left) is the mintage year, from 58 to 75 and sometimes it gets worn away and is unreadable.
Spain.