Andorra's coinage authority issued a long-running series of cardinal virtue coins, of which this is one installment. Because Andorra had no formal monetary sovereignty of its own until the 2011 monetary agreement with the EU — which authorized it to mint euro-denominated collector coins — these earlier diners issues occupied a curious legal space: legal tender within Andorra, but struck primarily for the collector market with no expectation of circulation.
KM#344 is a one-troy-ounce fine silver piece, part of a well-documented run. Mintage figures for the diners virtue series were typically capped in the low thousands.
Andorra's coinage authority issued a long-running series of cardinal virtue coins, of which this is one installment. Because Andorra had no formal monetary sovereignty of its own until the 2011 monetary agreement with the EU — which authorized it to mint euro-denominated collector coins — these earlier diners issues occupied a curious legal space: legal tender within Andorra, but struck primarily for the collector market with no expectation of circulation.
KM#344 is a one-troy-ounce fine silver piece, part of a well-documented run. Mintage figures for the diners virtue series were typically capped in the low thousands.