Like many other mints, the Austrian Mint (Münze Österreich) produces a variety of coins in precious metals targeted at collectors or investors. Most of these are in formats based on the internationally popular troy ounce, including in the half ounce (1/2oz) of gold format. The most famous range that the mint produces is the Vienna Philharmonic, but it also strikes gold half ounces with other themes.
This coin is the second release in the Magic of Gold six-coin series, and features the Gold of the Pharaohs.
The mint says about it: An aura of mystery surrounds The Gold of the Pharaohs, the second coin in The Magic of Gold series, which traces the mysterious nature of gold in Ancient cultures. Made of pure gold, the "flesh of the gods" and the symbol of eternity in Ancient Egypt, the coin features the death mask of the "boy king", Tutankhamun. More than 3,000 years old, the most celebrated of all the famous burial objects uncovered in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings is still casting its spell in the 21st century.
Inscrutable in its beauty, the face of Tutankhamun guards the secret of the Pharaohs and tells the story in pictures of what took place more than 3,000 years ago. In the 14th century BC, Tutankhamun’s father, Akhenaten, declared the sun god, Aten, the one and only god and the Pharaoh his only representative on earth. When Akhenaten died in the seventeenth year of his reign, his successor was still a little boy, but Tutankhamun ascended to the throne just four years later. The Priesthood and officials, it is presumed, made Tutankhamun rescind his father’s reforms and restore ancient Egyptian polytheism by reintroducing the worship of multiple gods.
Tutankhamun was not even 20 years old when he died. But thanks to Howard Carter, an iconic representation of the boy king lives on. The British archaeologist made a sensational discovery in 1922 when he came across Tutankhamun’s tomb in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. As symmetrical and unearthly as it appears, on the death mask, which weighs 12 kg, Tutankhamun’s face seems natural at the same time, as if the real face of the young Pharaoh has been covered with gold so that it will last for eternity.
All six coins in the Magic of Gold series feature ancient art treasures, and the word "gold" is written on each of them in the respective script of the culture they explore. |
Obverse | |
The obverse of the coin features a collage of Ancient Egyptian images, with Tutankhamun’s father Akhenaten at its centre. The elder Pharaoh is on his knees with hands raised in homage to the sun god, Aten, as the lance-shaped rays of the solar disk descend towards him. In the background we see a sarcophagus containing a Pharaoh, under which the hieroglyphic for gold can be seen.
Around above, the legend REPUBLIK ÖSTERREICH (translated from German: Republic of Austria).
On two lines above left, the face value and denomination: 100 EURO, below which the date of issue 2020. |
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