1961 Mali 5-franc
Verfasst: Di 10.11.15 05:40
A 1961 5-franc from Mali struck in aluminum, with a diameter of 20mm and a weight of 1.00g, the low-value in a three-coin series that was a part of the flood of African independence that marked the late-1950s and early-1960s.
Mali won its independence in 1960, and these 1961-dated coins were issued in 1962. Pictured on the series was the lion on the 25-franc, a horse on the 10-franc, and on these 5-franc pieces, a front-facing hippopotamus.
Front-facing coin portraits are generally a tricky exercise, but who can say with confidence when a designer has gotten a hippo wrong?
Well, maybe it can be objected to on religious grounds. After all, the same year of this 1961 5-franc piece, Mali’s flag had its stick-figure representation of a human removed because of pressure from the country’s Islamic citizens—it had run afoul of the proscription, in certain contexts, against the use of human- (and some forms of animal-) imagery.
Mali—the country takes its name from the Mali Empire of ancient times, but I have read that “mali” means “hippopotamus” in the local Bamanankan language, so….
Mali—actual location of a famous place-name in idiomatic English: “Timbuktu.”
v.
Mali won its independence in 1960, and these 1961-dated coins were issued in 1962. Pictured on the series was the lion on the 25-franc, a horse on the 10-franc, and on these 5-franc pieces, a front-facing hippopotamus.
Front-facing coin portraits are generally a tricky exercise, but who can say with confidence when a designer has gotten a hippo wrong?
Well, maybe it can be objected to on religious grounds. After all, the same year of this 1961 5-franc piece, Mali’s flag had its stick-figure representation of a human removed because of pressure from the country’s Islamic citizens—it had run afoul of the proscription, in certain contexts, against the use of human- (and some forms of animal-) imagery.
Mali—the country takes its name from the Mali Empire of ancient times, but I have read that “mali” means “hippopotamus” in the local Bamanankan language, so….
Mali—actual location of a famous place-name in idiomatic English: “Timbuktu.”
