1991 Russian 3-ruble Gagarin commem
Verfasst: Di 01.03.16 21:29
This 1991 3-ruble was struck by the former Soviet Union in .900 silver, with a diameter of 39mm and a weight of 34.56g. Coined in Leningrad (or the newly renamed St. Petersburg, if the coinage was executed late enough in the year), this big commemorative—it contains a full (troy) ounce of silver—celebrates humankind’s first manned journey into space.
This is dramatic coinage, with stark proof surfaces and the hyper-heroic image of the Gagarin Monument on Moscow’s Leninsky Avenue. But then why not…the first manned spaceflight was heroic, and dramatic, and the contrast between the world before the event, and after it, was quite stark indeed.
This Gagarin 3-ruble piece, which was the Krause COTY (Coin of the Year) award winner for “Most historically significant coin” of 1991, shares its presentation case with a companion medal…
This is dramatic coinage, with stark proof surfaces and the hyper-heroic image of the Gagarin Monument on Moscow’s Leninsky Avenue. But then why not…the first manned spaceflight was heroic, and dramatic, and the contrast between the world before the event, and after it, was quite stark indeed.
This Gagarin 3-ruble piece, which was the Krause COTY (Coin of the Year) award winner for “Most historically significant coin” of 1991, shares its presentation case with a companion medal…