Transnistria's commemorative coinage program has long targeted the collector market rather than circulation, and this piece is squarely in that tradition — issued eighty years after the first All-Union Spartakiade, the Soviet mass athletic games held in Moscow in 1927 that were explicitly designed as a communist alternative to the bourgeois Olympics. The original Spartakiade drew over 600 delegations and was staged partly to justify the USSR's continued boycott of the International Olympic Committee.
Transnistria itself has no recognized sovereignty under international law, making its numismatic issues legally curios rather than true state coinage.
Transnistria's commemorative coinage program has long targeted the collector market rather than circulation, and this piece is squarely in that tradition — issued eighty years after the first All-Union Spartakiade, the Soviet mass athletic games held in Moscow in 1927 that were explicitly designed as a communist alternative to the bourgeois Olympics. The original Spartakiade drew over 600 delegations and was staged partly to justify the USSR's continued boycott of the International Olympic Committee.
Transnistria itself has no recognized sovereignty under international law, making its numismatic issues legally curios rather than true state coinage.