500 Tolarjev (Jurij Vega) 2004 front 500 Tolarjev (Jurij Vega) 2004 back
500 Tolarjev (Jurij Vega) 2004 photo
Obverse © Rahul Ghosal

500 Tolarjev Jurij Vega

2004 year
Bimetallic: copper-nickel centre in nickel brass ring (center 75% Copper, 25% Nickel, ring 78% Copper, 20% Zinc, 2% Nickel) 8.6 g 28 mm
Description
Issuer
Slovenia
Period
Republic (1991-date)
Type
Circulating commemorative coin
Year
2004
Value
500 Tolarjev (500&nbspSIT)
Currency
Tolar (1991-2006)
Composition
Bimetallic: copper-nickel centre in nickel brass ring (center 75% Copper, 25% Nickel, ring 78% Copper, 20% Zinc, 2% Nickel)
Weight
8.6 g
Diameter
28 mm
Thickness
2 mm
Shape
Round
Technique
Milled
Orientation
Medal alignment ↑↑
Demonetized
14 January 2007
Updated
2024-10-07
References
Numista
N#6162
Rarity index
23%

Reverse

Profile left looking down within mathematical
graph

Script: Latin

Lettering: JURIJ VEGA 1754.2004

Designers: Miljenko Licul, Maja Licul

Edge

170 reeds.

Comment

Jurij Vega was born on 23 March 1754 to a poor peasant family in Zagorica, in the vicinity of Ljubljana. He went to a Jesuit secondary school in Ljubljana and completed his schooling at the lyceum, passing his examination in physics, mathematics, logic and metaphysics. He found a job as an inland navigation engineer, and worked on the Ljubljanica, the Mura, the Drava and the Sava rivers. An ambitious young man, in 1780 he entered military service in Vienna and was involved in battles the width and breadth of Europe. His know-how and his valour helped him carry out a series of extraordinary acts, for which he received the highest military decoration, later being made a baron and a lieutenant-colonel. His body was found in the Danube in September 1802, and it was never established if it was suicide, murder or just an accident.
As an artillery officer, a specialist in the heaviest mortars, in peacetime he taught mathematics at a special artillery department, introducing mathematical analysis classes and producing a mathematics and physics textbook. He wrote about balloons, land surveying and meteorology, but was most famed for his work on ballistics, becoming one of the first to give the field a scientific basis. He was an inventor, and used mathematics to improve the mechanisms of pendulum clocks. He was a progressive advocate of the metric system, and confusion reigned in this area, it was only three generations later that this system was standardised.
His most important work was his logarithmic tables, thanks to which he became a member of several European academies of science. The tables were used for calculations in science, in everyday life and in education all around the world until the introduction of electronic calculators. Using the tables to calculate made a decisive contribution to the rise of mathematics in numerous areas, which in turn made the progress of the scientific and technical revolution faster.
To mark the 250th anniversary of Jurij Vega’s birth, the Republic of Slovenia is issuing three commemorative coins featuring a combination of an image of a drawing from Vega’s essay on the shape of the rotating earth (an axial section of a rotating sphere) and a profile of Vega taken from a bust made by sculptor Ivan Zajc in 1903.
Accessed at: https://www.bsi.si/en/banknotes-and-coins/slovenian-tolar/commemorative-editions-republic-of-slovenia/250th-anniversary-of-the-birth-of-jurij-vega-2004

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about the 500 Tolarjev (Jurij Vega) 2004 coin from Slovenia is that it features a unique bimetallic design, with a copper-nickel center surrounded by a nickel brass ring. This distinctive design element sets it apart from other coins and makes it a standout piece in any collection.

Price

Date Mintage VG F VF XF AU UNC
2004  1500 - - - - - -

Values in the table are based on evaluations by sales realized on Internet platforms. They serve as an indication only for 500 Tolarjev (Jurij Vega) 2004 coin.