The Baltic Way — August 23, 1989 — saw an estimated 675,000 people form a human chain stretching roughly 675 kilometers across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, chosen to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact whose secret protocols had handed the three republics to Soviet occupation. The protest was entirely peaceful and internationally televised, accelerating the independence movements that would formally succeed within two years.
Niue has become a favored issuing vehicle for commemorative silver because its status as a New Zealand realm allows straightforward Royal Mint partnerships without the bureaucratic weight of larger sovereign issuers. The date of the chain — not the independence declarations themselves — is what this coin marks.
The Baltic Way — August 23, 1989 — saw an estimated 675,000 people form a human chain stretching roughly 675 kilometers across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, chosen to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact whose secret protocols had handed the three republics to Soviet occupation. The protest was entirely peaceful and internationally televised, accelerating the independence movements that would formally succeed within two years.
Niue has become a favored issuing vehicle for commemorative silver because its status as a New Zealand realm allows straightforward Royal Mint partnerships without the bureaucratic weight of larger sovereign issuers. The date of the chain — not the independence declarations themselves — is what this coin marks.