Niue has long served Pacific island minting programs as a convenient licensing jurisdiction, and the resulting output is voluminous — most issues see mintages under 5,000 and are sold directly to collectors through distributors, never approaching circulation. The "Liliana" designation places this coin within a named-character or artistic series, a format that became commercially dominant in the secondary silver bullion-collectible market through the 2010s.
KM#3299 helps anchor the type in standard references, but Krause coverage of Niuean collector issues from this period is notoriously incomplete at the variety level.
Niue has long served Pacific island minting programs as a convenient licensing jurisdiction, and the resulting output is voluminous — most issues see mintages under 5,000 and are sold directly to collectors through distributors, never approaching circulation. The "Liliana" designation places this coin within a named-character or artistic series, a format that became commercially dominant in the secondary silver bullion-collectible market through the 2010s.
KM#3299 helps anchor the type in standard references, but Krause coverage of Niuean collector issues from this period is notoriously incomplete at the variety level.