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2 Milliemes - Idris I

Issuer Libya
Year 1952
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Reference(s) KM#2
Obverse description Right-facing effigy of King Idris I, depicted wearing a traditional Libyan kufiya headdress with trailing cloth, his draped bust truncated at the lower field. The portrait, modelled in high relief by engraver Paul Vincze, conveys a dignified and naturalistic likeness. Arabic legends flank the effigy on both sides of the field, with the engraver's initials P.V. incuse at the lower truncation. The design is enclosed by a finely beaded border.
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Mintage 1952 - ١٩٥٢ - 6,650,000
1952 - ١٩٥٢ Proof Sets only (KM#PS1) - 32
Additional information

Libya's first independent coinage, issued in 1952, came just months after the country achieved independence in December 1951 — the first nation to gain independence through a United Nations resolution. Idris I, formerly the Emir of Cyrenaica, became king of a federal state that had been administratively divided between a British-supervised north and a French-supervised Fezzan only recently unified on paper.

The bronze millieme series was produced at the Royal Mint in London under contract.

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