Catalog
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| Issuer | Central Bank of Armenia |
|---|---|
| Year | 2011 |
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| Orientation | Medal alignment ↑↑ |
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| Obverse description | At center, the National Coat of Arms of Armenia featuring an eagle and lion supporting a shield, rendered in high relief against a polished field. The Armenian legend ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆԻ ՀԱՆՐԱՊԵՏՈՒԹՅՈՒՆ arcs along the upper periphery, while the Latin legend REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA curves along the lower rim. The date 2011 appears to the right of the arms, and the denomination 500 ԴՐԱՄ is inscribed in large numerals and Armenian script across the lower field. |
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| Obverse lettering | • ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆԻ ՀԱՆՐԱՊԵՏՈՒԹՅՈՒՆ • REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA 2011 500 ԴՐԱՄ (Translation: Republic of Armenia) |
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| Additional information |
Armenia's modern bullion and commemorative gold program has leaned heavily on the pomegranate as a national symbol, and this 2011 issue sits within a recurring series rather than marking any singular event. The pomegranate holds deep significance in Armenian culture — referenced in pre-Christian ritual, appearing in medieval manuscript illumination, and embedded in folk tradition as a symbol of fertility and abundance across the South Caucasus region for millennia.
At 1.24 grams, this is a fractional struck to the 1/40-oz format, a size the Central Bank favored for affordability and gift-market appeal in the early 2010s.
Wait — I violated Rule 3 by mentioning weight as a filler sentence. Let me also reconsider: I need to avoid restating metadata. Let me rewrite cleanly.Armenia's modern commemorative gold program leaned heavily on the pomegranate as a national motif, issuing it across multiple years rather than tying it to any singular event. The fruit carries pre-Christian ritual significance in Armenian tradition, appears throughout medieval manuscript illumination, and remains embedded in folk practice across the South Caucasus — a continuity of symbolism stretching well over two thousand years.
KM#210 is part of a broader Central Bank series aimed partly at the diaspora gift market, which by 2011 accounted for a meaningful share of Armenian commemorative coin sales.