Pattern coins from the Royal Danish Mint rarely surface in trade, and this 1984 type IIa trial represents one of several competing designs evaluated before the definitive circulation specification for the 5 Krone was settled. The "type IIa" designation implies at least a second major design iteration, suggesting the approval process involved substantive back-and-forth between the mint and Danish monetary authorities — not an uncommon situation for a denomination that had already seen significant redesign since Margrethe II's accession in 1972.
Patterns of this era were struck in small numbers strictly for internal evaluation and ministerial approval, not distribution.
Pattern coins from the Royal Danish Mint rarely surface in trade, and this 1984 type IIa trial represents one of several competing designs evaluated before the definitive circulation specification for the 5 Krone was settled. The "type IIa" designation implies at least a second major design iteration, suggesting the approval process involved substantive back-and-forth between the mint and Danish monetary authorities — not an uncommon situation for a denomination that had already seen significant redesign since Margrethe II's accession in 1972.
Patterns of this era were struck in small numbers strictly for internal evaluation and ministerial approval, not distribution.