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| 背面描述 | The royal emblem of King Nangklao (Rama III) occupies the aluminium bronze centre field, depicting a Thai-style shield bearing a three-headed elephant, surmounted by a tiered spired throne canopy in traditional Thai architectural style, and flanked by two mythical lion-elephant hybrid creatures (singha) resting upon decorative orbs, all issuing from elaborate floral and scrollwork at the base. The copper-nickel outer ring carries a curved Thai legend commemorating the king around the upper portion, with the date '๓๐ มีนาคม ๒๕๔๑' (30 March 1998) to the right, and the denomination '๑๐ บาท ประเทศไทย' (10 Baht Thailand) inscribed along the lower arc. |
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| 边缘 | Segmented reeding |
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| 附加信息 |
The Nangklao series of Thai bimetallic 10 baht pieces honors Rama III, who ruled Siam from 1824 to 1851 and oversaw the kingdom's first tentative engagements with Western trade — including early treaty negotiations with the East India Company that his successor Mongkut would later formalize. The bimetallic format itself was introduced to Thailand in 1988 for the 10 baht denomination, replacing the smaller cupro-nickel piece, partly as an anti-counterfeiting measure as Thailand's economy expanded rapidly through the late boom years.
This piece was struck in 1998, the year after the baht collapsed under speculative pressure and triggered the Asian financial crisis — the very currency this coin represents lost roughly half its dollar value within months of the previous year's float.