This piece belongs to Cook Islands' long-running series of themed commemoratives issued through the 1990s, a program driven almost entirely by the collector market rather than any domestic monetary need — the islands' actual circulating currency has long been the New Zealand dollar. The "5th Century" designation places the subject matter in one of history's more turbulent transitional periods: the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, the migrations of the Huns and Goths, and the effective end of unified Roman coinage across Europe.
Cook Islands held no minting infrastructure of its own; these were produced under contract, almost certainly by the Pobjoy Mint in the UK, which handled the bulk of Cook Islands commemorative output during this decade.
This piece belongs to Cook Islands' long-running series of themed commemoratives issued through the 1990s, a program driven almost entirely by the collector market rather than any domestic monetary need — the islands' actual circulating currency has long been the New Zealand dollar. The "5th Century" designation places the subject matter in one of history's more turbulent transitional periods: the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, the migrations of the Huns and Goths, and the effective end of unified Roman coinage across Europe.
Cook Islands held no minting infrastructure of its own; these were produced under contract, almost certainly by the Pobjoy Mint in the UK, which handled the bulk of Cook Islands commemorative output during this decade.