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50 Kopiiok with mintmark, non-magnetic

Issuer National Bank of Ukraine
Year 2001-2012
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Currency Hryvnia (1996-date)
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Reverse description The reverse displays the bold numeral '50' in large raised figures dominating the central field, with the Cyrillic denomination legend КОПІЙОК (kopiiok) inscribed below in a stylised national script. The entire central device is encircled by a continuous ornamental border of intertwining vine-like stems bearing leaves and berry clusters in a traditional Ukrainian folk decorative style, running close to the rim.
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Mintage 2001 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
2003 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
2004 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
2006 - 4 varieties exist - 50,000,000
2007 - - 150,000,000
2008 - - 120,000,000
2008 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
2009 - - 125,000,000
2010 - - 36,700,000
2011 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
2012 - Prooflike; In Sets only - 5,000
Additional information

Ukraine's post-independence coinage was chronically disrupted through the late 1990s by acute metal shortages and a mint infrastructure inherited from the Soviet period that was ill-suited to sovereign production demands. The Luhansk Mint and the Kyiv-based Banknote and Mint of Ukraine both struck coins in this period, and the addition of a mintmark to this type — distinguishing it from the earlier KM#3.3a — reflects the National Bank's belated move toward production accountability after years of unmarked output from multiple facilities.

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