Cook Islands has issued commemorative silver under its own authority since 1972, despite having no independent central bank — monetary policy remains tied to New Zealand, which means these pieces were never intended for circulation and exist purely as collector instruments licensed through private minting arrangements. The "Mythology of the Maori" series drew on oral traditions that were largely unrecorded in written form until the late 19th century, when ethnographers like John White compiled them under colonial-era frameworks that introduced their own distortions.
KM#1590 is one of several issues in the series, each contracted through a European mint rather than struck domestically.
Cook Islands has issued commemorative silver under its own authority since 1972, despite having no independent central bank — monetary policy remains tied to New Zealand, which means these pieces were never intended for circulation and exist purely as collector instruments licensed through private minting arrangements. The "Mythology of the Maori" series drew on oral traditions that were largely unrecorded in written form until the late 19th century, when ethnographers like John White compiled them under colonial-era frameworks that introduced their own distortions.
KM#1590 is one of several issues in the series, each contracted through a European mint rather than struck domestically.