Issued the year after Russia's catastrophic hyperinflationary crisis of 1992, this piece belongs to a commemorative gold program that the Bank of Russia used partly to generate hard currency revenue during a period when the rouble itself had collapsed to a fraction of its Soviet-era value. Rachmaninov was chosen deliberately — he had died in 1943 as a stateless exile in Beverly Hills, having fled Russia in 1917 and never returned, a biographical detail that made him a complicated but prestigious figure for the new post-Soviet state to reclaim.
The .900 fineness matches pre-revolutionary Russian gold coinage standards — an almost certainly intentional echo.
Issued the year after Russia's catastrophic hyperinflationary crisis of 1992, this piece belongs to a commemorative gold program that the Bank of Russia used partly to generate hard currency revenue during a period when the rouble itself had collapsed to a fraction of its Soviet-era value. Rachmaninov was chosen deliberately — he had died in 1943 as a stateless exile in Beverly Hills, having fled Russia in 1917 and never returned, a biographical detail that made him a complicated but prestigious figure for the new post-Soviet state to reclaim.
The .900 fineness matches pre-revolutionary Russian gold coinage standards — an almost certainly intentional echo.