1 Lats 2010 - Amber Coin.

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dbl
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1 Lats 2010 - Amber Coin.

Beitrag von dbl »

:hi:
Latvijas Banka hat geschrieben: On Issuing a New Collector Coin - "Amber Coin"

Riga, 15 November 2010

The Bank of Latvia today issued a 1-lats collector coin, the "Amber Coin". The author of its graphic design and plaster model is artist Aigars Bikše.

The Bank of Latvia collector coins are miniature art works dedicated to Latvian treasures: events, successes, people that are expressive of our culture. Amber - a mineral and semiprecious stone originating from the resin of ancient amber pines that used to grow in the territory of Latvia and is still washed ashore the Baltic Sea in small pieces - is now embedded in the "Amber Coin", marking its significance. In a way, the coin is also dedicated to all Latvian cities, towns and communities situated on the coast of the sea.

Amber has always been part of the Latvian heritage and even economy: amber jewellery has been made in Latvia for thousands of years; the oldest coins found in the Latvian territory came from ancient Rome by way of the so-called Amber Route and were paid for with amber. Money and amber literally meet in this coin: a small piece of amber has been carefully embedded in each coin. According to the artist's idea, the small amber cylinder has become the pupil of an eye. The eye that helps to look into the past and the surrounding world.

The 1-lats silver "Amber Coin" is legal tender in the Republic of Latvia. The maximum number of issued coins is limited to 7 000. The Amber Coin will be on sale at the Bank of Latvia and such traditional points of coin sale as banks and souvenir and jewellery shops. The price of the coin at the Bank of Latvia's cashier offices is 28.80 lats. As the production of the coins requires slow and accurate work, mintage batches will be sent to Latvia gradually.
Latvijas Banka hat geschrieben: Amber Coin
LV_2010_AMBER.jpg
Face value: 1 lats
Weight: 20.70 g, diameter: 35.00 mm
Material: silver of .925 fineness and amber; quality: proof
Struck in 2010 by Rahapaja Oy (Finland)
Artist: Aigars Bikše

Obverse
A transparent amber cylinder of appropriate thickness has been set into the centre of the coin. The inscription 1 LATS is placed in the upper left part of the obverse while the upper right part features sea waves. The inscription LATVIJAS REPUBLIKA and year 2010 is arranged in a semi-circle at the bottom.

Reverse
An eye with an amber pupil is featured in the centre of the reverse.

Edge
Plain.


Forty million years passed, and amber saw a human being for the first time…

Forty million years ago the territory of present-day Latvia looked very much different: there was no Baltic Sea, the climate was subtropical, there were thick coniferous forests, providing shelter to many species of now extinct animals. Among the vegetation, there were the so-called amber pines (Pinus succinifera). If their bark was injured for some reason, these trees oozed a great amount of resin. The resin flowed to the ground, fossilised, and, when many million years later water washed out the ancient bedrock, the waves threw to the shore small pieces of the petrified substance, which resembles frozen drops of honey in sunlight and which we call amber.

Present-day discussions about the preservation of ecosystems and global warming make us aware how fragile and subject to change is our environment. Evidence of change that our surrounding world has experienced is on view everywhere: in ancient river valleys, huge rocks left by glaciers in the middle of fields, or amber that we find in the seaside sand. The human lifespan is negligible compared to amber's but here they both are: together on the shores of the Baltic Sea. In a way, it's almost incredible: how is it possible to determine where the piece of petrified resin will end up millions of years later? How can a tiny speck of it be noticed among millions of grains of sand? Yet this meeting is possible, and at such moments we manage to overcome our being tied to a particular point in time. When we lift the amber to the sun, it once again shines in the hues of prehistoric forests that once covered the territory of Latvia.

This semiprecious stone is one of the first minerals used by the human race. Amber jewellery has been made in Latvia for thousands of years; in the Neolithic settlement in western Kurzeme, Sārnate, there had even been an amber-processing workshop. Jewellery at that time was made both for personal use and as an exchange commodity. The pieces were buttons of various shapes, beads, and pendants; some were carved into mythological figures. The oldest coins found in the Latvian territory came from ancient Rome by way of the so-called Amber Route and were paid for with amber. The routes of such coins and amber have tended to cross many times over the course of history.

Change is inescapable, yet there are ways to preserve objects of value. In the making of the "Amber Coin", a new technology was used to work amber into the metal.
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Kai
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Re: 1 Lats 2010 - Amber Coin.

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Das Bernsteinauge :
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werner018
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Re: 1 Lats 2010 - Amber Coin.

Beitrag von werner018 »

Das ist der Folder zur Münze:
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