Released as part of the Soviet Union's late-period commemorative program, this issue appeared just one year before the USSR's dissolution — a moment when Gorbachev's government was paradoxically promoting Russian Orthodox architectural heritage through state coinage while the Communist Party's grip on cultural and religious life was visibly collapsing. The Uspensky Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin, seat of Russian Orthodox metropolitans and later patriarchs from the 15th century onward, had spent decades as a museum under Soviet rule.
Copper-nickel commemoratives from this final Soviet run were struck in comparatively high numbers for export and collector sales, generating hard currency at a time when the state desperately needed it.
Released as part of the Soviet Union's late-period commemorative program, this issue appeared just one year before the USSR's dissolution — a moment when Gorbachev's government was paradoxically promoting Russian Orthodox architectural heritage through state coinage while the Communist Party's grip on cultural and religious life was visibly collapsing. The Uspensky Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin, seat of Russian Orthodox metropolitans and later patriarchs from the 15th century onward, had spent decades as a museum under Soviet rule.
Copper-nickel commemoratives from this final Soviet run were struck in comparatively high numbers for export and collector sales, generating hard currency at a time when the state desperately needed it.