Ascension Island has no permanent indigenous population and no local currency in circulation — the territory uses Saint Helena pounds and, practically, British pounds sterling. Its commemorative coin program exists entirely for the collector market, administered through licensing arrangements rather than any genuine monetary need. This piece was issued to mark the Queen Mother's centenary in 2000, one of dozens of commemoratives released across British Overseas Territories that year under similar arrangements.
The Friedberg reference places it squarely in the gold coin cataloguing tradition, though it functions as a bullion-weight collectible rather than a struck sovereign issue in any historical sense.
Ascension Island has no permanent indigenous population and no local currency in circulation — the territory uses Saint Helena pounds and, practically, British pounds sterling. Its commemorative coin program exists entirely for the collector market, administered through licensing arrangements rather than any genuine monetary need. This piece was issued to mark the Queen Mother's centenary in 2000, one of dozens of commemoratives released across British Overseas Territories that year under similar arrangements.
The Friedberg reference places it squarely in the gold coin cataloguing tradition, though it functions as a bullion-weight collectible rather than a struck sovereign issue in any historical sense.