It certainly looks Spanish (or rather, Spanish-colonial), but certain details are "wrong": the portrait, and the way that, for example, the letter sizes in the word "DEI" are all different, indicate to me that this is actually a contemporary counterfeit. The brassy colour would also lend weight to this theory (it was presumably originally made with a silvery wash, which has since disappeared). Finally, 28mm is a good size for a 2 reales (quarter-dollar), but 4.8 grams is way too light, even for a well-worn example.
American-made counterfeits with the "mintmark" given as "FMR S.I.H" are reported (no genuine 2 reales coin has this legend); Kleeberg in his "Circulating Counterfeits of the Americas" lists this reverse type as number M5.
Contemporary counterfeits are highly collectable artifacts in their own right.
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