Antonio José de Sucre's place on a high-value Venezuelan gold commemorative is not arbitrary flattery. Sucre commanded the patriot forces at Ayacucho in December 1824 — the battle that effectively ended Spanish colonial rule in South America — and Venezuela has consistently used his image on prestige coinage when political circumstances call for nationalist weight. By 1995, the bolívar was under sustained devaluation pressure following the 1994 banking crisis that wiped out roughly half of Venezuela's financial institutions, and high-denomination gold issues of this period were as much a hedge instrument as a collectible.
Antonio José de Sucre's place on a high-value Venezuelan gold commemorative is not arbitrary flattery. Sucre commanded the patriot forces at Ayacucho in December 1824 — the battle that effectively ended Spanish colonial rule in South America — and Venezuela has consistently used his image on prestige coinage when political circumstances call for nationalist weight. By 1995, the bolívar was under sustained devaluation pressure following the 1994 banking crisis that wiped out roughly half of Venezuela's financial institutions, and high-denomination gold issues of this period were as much a hedge instrument as a collectible.