Somalia has issued coins under its nominal authority since the 1990s largely as a licensing arrangement with foreign mints, producing pieces with no connection to actual Somali circulation — the country had no functioning central bank and was effectively stateless at the time of this issue. This piece belongs to a broad series of commemorative coins sold directly into the international collector market, using the Somali issuing name as a legal vehicle.
The Victoria portrait used across such series typically derives from one of the official jubilee effigies, most commonly the Jubilee or Veiled head types of the 1880s–90s.
Somalia has issued coins under its nominal authority since the 1990s largely as a licensing arrangement with foreign mints, producing pieces with no connection to actual Somali circulation — the country had no functioning central bank and was effectively stateless at the time of this issue. This piece belongs to a broad series of commemorative coins sold directly into the international collector market, using the Somali issuing name as a legal vehicle.
The Victoria portrait used across such series typically derives from one of the official jubilee effigies, most commonly the Jubilee or Veiled head types of the 1880s–90s.