Updated  7/16/2000
1929 2 1/2 gulden Netherlands

Mintage of 4,400,000, silver dollar size coin.

Obverse show the profile of Wilhelmina, full name WILHELMINA HELENA PAULINE MARIA (1880-1962), queen of the Netherlands (1890-1948), born in The Hague. In 1890, following the death of her father, King William III, the last male member of the house of Orange-Nassau, Wilhelmina became queen and her mother, Queen Emma, was appointed regent. Because Luxembourg refused to recognize a woman ruler, the union of the grand duchy with the
Netherlands was terminated in that year by Wilhelmina's accession. She was crowned on September 6, 1898. In 1901 she married Henry, duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Wilhelmina vigorously supported Dutch neutrality during World War I. In World War II, after the German invasion of the Netherlands (1940), she established a government-in-exile in England, where she became a symbol of Dutch resistance, remaining in contact with the Netherlands by radio. Wilhelmina returned to the Netherlands in 1945. On September 4, 1948, because of ill health, she abdicated in favor of her only child, Princess Juliana.

Minted in Utrecht, shown by the mercury staff on the obverse.

Mintmaster Dr. C. Hoitsema, shown by the sea horse.

Originally a golden coin, the gulden was first minted in Florence in the 13th century. After 1325 it was also minted north of the Alps. By 1559 the gulden was coined in silver and remains the official currency of the Netherlands.
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