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3½ Gulden - Wilhelmina

Issuer Indonesia › Netherlands East Indies (1601-1949)
Year 1943
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Currency Gulden (decimalized, 1854-1948)
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Obverse lettering WILHELMINA KONINGIN DER NEDERLANDEN
Reverse description Central shield bearing the Dutch lion rampant, topped by a royal crown with elaborate ornamentation including pearls and a cross finial. The denomination 3½ G appears prominently flanking the shield on either side in large characters. The circular legend MUNT VAN HET KONINGRIJK DER NEDERLANDEN runs around the periphery within a beaded border. The date 1943 appears in the lower exergue beneath the shield. The overall composition follows the heraldic tradition of Netherlands colonial coinage.
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Additional information

This piece was struck in the United States — at the Philadelphia mint — after the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies made domestic production impossible. The Netherlands government-in-exile arranged emergency coinage through American facilities, a stopgap measure that resulted in several denominations being minted stateside for a colonial territory thousands of miles away and entirely under enemy control.

The 3½ gulden denomination itself was peculiar to the East Indies monetary system and saw limited use even before the war; by 1943 it was being struck for a economy that had functionally ceased to exist under Dutch authority.

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