South Ossetia has no internationally recognized central bank in any functional sense — the territory operates almost entirely on the Russian ruble under a subsidy-dependent economy, and its "National Bank" issues no currency accepted anywhere. These silver pieces are produced for the collector market under the issuing authority's name, a practice common among partially recognized or unrecognized states seeking seigniorage revenue from numismatic sales.
Anders Johan Sjögren was a 19th-century Finnish-Swedish linguist and ethnographer who conducted fieldwork across the Caucasus in the 1840s, documenting Ossetian language and culture at a time when very few Western scholars had any access to the region.
South Ossetia has no internationally recognized central bank in any functional sense — the territory operates almost entirely on the Russian ruble under a subsidy-dependent economy, and its "National Bank" issues no currency accepted anywhere. These silver pieces are produced for the collector market under the issuing authority's name, a practice common among partially recognized or unrecognized states seeking seigniorage revenue from numismatic sales.
Anders Johan Sjögren was a 19th-century Finnish-Swedish linguist and ethnographer who conducted fieldwork across the Caucasus in the 1840s, documenting Ossetian language and culture at a time when very few Western scholars had any access to the region.