Part of a broader "Seven Wonders of the Ancient World" bullion series, this piece was produced for the collector market rather than circulation — the Solomon Islands issuing authority having no meaningful connection to the subject matter beyond providing a legal tender framework for the series. The Colossus itself stood at the entrance to Rhodes harbor for roughly 54 years before an earthquake toppled it around 226 BC, after which it lay in ruins for nearly nine centuries before Arab traders melted it down around 654 AD.
Part of a broader "Seven Wonders of the Ancient World" bullion series, this piece was produced for the collector market rather than circulation — the Solomon Islands issuing authority having no meaningful connection to the subject matter beyond providing a legal tender framework for the series. The Colossus itself stood at the entrance to Rhodes harbor for roughly 54 years before an earthquake toppled it around 226 BC, after which it lay in ruins for nearly nine centuries before Arab traders melted it down around 654 AD.