Laos adopted the twelve-animal lunar cycle as a coinage theme relatively late compared to regional neighbors, but the Bank of the Lao PDR has issued lunar series pieces with some consistency since the 1990s. The Snake occupies the sixth position in the cycle and carries particular significance in Lao Buddhist tradition, where the nāga — a serpentine deity of rivers and rain — blurs the line between zodiacal symbol and cosmological guardian. Whether that resonance was deliberate on the part of the issuing authority is unclear, but it distinguishes Lao Snake issues from the more secular treatments common in East Asian mints.
Laos adopted the twelve-animal lunar cycle as a coinage theme relatively late compared to regional neighbors, but the Bank of the Lao PDR has issued lunar series pieces with some consistency since the 1990s. The Snake occupies the sixth position in the cycle and carries particular significance in Lao Buddhist tradition, where the nāga — a serpentine deity of rivers and rain — blurs the line between zodiacal symbol and cosmological guardian. Whether that resonance was deliberate on the part of the issuing authority is unclear, but it distinguishes Lao Snake issues from the more secular treatments common in East Asian mints.