Armenia's first commemorative silver issues appeared in 1994, just three years after independence from the Soviet Union, as the Central Bank sought to establish the dram as a credible currency following its introduction in November 1993 — itself a response to the collapse of the ruble zone. The country was simultaneously managing a crippling energy blockade and active conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh when these coins were authorized.
The 31.1g fine silver format places this squarely in the one-troy-ounce collector series that dominated sovereign mint output in the early 1990s, though Armenian issues from this period remain considerably less documented in Western auction records than comparable post-Soviet emissions from the Baltic states.
Armenia's first commemorative silver issues appeared in 1994, just three years after independence from the Soviet Union, as the Central Bank sought to establish the dram as a credible currency following its introduction in November 1993 — itself a response to the collapse of the ruble zone. The country was simultaneously managing a crippling energy blockade and active conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh when these coins were authorized.
The 31.1g fine silver format places this squarely in the one-troy-ounce collector series that dominated sovereign mint output in the early 1990s, though Armenian issues from this period remain considerably less documented in Western auction records than comparable post-Soviet emissions from the Baltic states.