Niue's legal tender coinage program has operated almost entirely as a vehicle for the New Zealand-administered territory's licensing agreements with overseas minting houses — the island's actual population hovers around 1,600, and no meaningful domestic circulation occurs. This piece is part of a broader Japanese mythology series produced for the collector market, with Watatsumi being the Shinto deity of the sea, ruler of the underwater palace Ryūgū-jō.
The mother-of-pearl inlay sourced for issues like this typically comes from South Pacific mollusks, a deliberate regional nod that the Mint of Poland — who produced much of this series — incorporated as a material choice rather than pure decoration.
Niue's legal tender coinage program has operated almost entirely as a vehicle for the New Zealand-administered territory's licensing agreements with overseas minting houses — the island's actual population hovers around 1,600, and no meaningful domestic circulation occurs. This piece is part of a broader Japanese mythology series produced for the collector market, with Watatsumi being the Shinto deity of the sea, ruler of the underwater palace Ryūgū-jō.
The mother-of-pearl inlay sourced for issues like this typically comes from South Pacific mollusks, a deliberate regional nod that the Mint of Poland — who produced much of this series — incorporated as a material choice rather than pure decoration.