Miklós Zrínyi — poet, military strategist, and Ban of Croatia — died in a hunting accident in 1664 under circumstances suspicious enough that contemporaries immediately blamed Habsburg intrigue. This coin was issued to mark the 300th anniversary of that death, part of a broader Hungarian effort in the 1960s to rehabilitate figures whose nationalism could be framed as anti-Habsburg resistance rather than anti-Soviet sentiment.
The .900 gold specification and 42-gram weight place it firmly in the tradition of Hungarian commemorative presentation pieces rather than circulation strikes — produced for foreign exchange revenue and collector sets, the standard instrument of hard-currency generation for the Hungarian mint throughout the Communist period.
Miklós Zrínyi — poet, military strategist, and Ban of Croatia — died in a hunting accident in 1664 under circumstances suspicious enough that contemporaries immediately blamed Habsburg intrigue. This coin was issued to mark the 300th anniversary of that death, part of a broader Hungarian effort in the 1960s to rehabilitate figures whose nationalism could be framed as anti-Habsburg resistance rather than anti-Soviet sentiment.
The .900 gold specification and 42-gram weight place it firmly in the tradition of Hungarian commemorative presentation pieces rather than circulation strikes — produced for foreign exchange revenue and collector sets, the standard instrument of hard-currency generation for the Hungarian mint throughout the Communist period.