5000 Tolarjev (Bishop Abraham - Freising Manuscripts) 1994 front 5000 Tolarjev (Bishop Abraham - Freising Manuscripts) 1994 back
no image

5000 Tolarjev Bishop Abraham - Freising Manuscripts

1994 year
Gold (.900) 7 g 24 mm
Description
Issuer
Slovenia
Period
Republic (1991-date)
Type
Non-circulating coin
Year
1994
Value
5000 Tolarjev (5000&nbspSIT)
Currency
Tolar (1991-2006)
Composition
Gold (.900)
Weight
7 g
Diameter
24 mm
Shape
Round
Technique
Milled
Orientation
Medal alignment ↑↑
Demonetized
15 January 2007
Updated
2024-10-07
References
Numista
N#48751
Rarity index
94%

Reverse

Quill
The Freising Manuscripts are the first Roman-script record of any Slavonic language.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
BRIŽINSKI
SPOMENIKI
ŠKOF
ABRAHAM
994 - 1994

Engraver: Vincenc Vipotnik

Designers: Gorazd Učakar, Matjaž Učakar

Edge

200 reeds.

Comment

The Freising Manuscripts are the first Roman-script record of any Slavonic language. They consist of three texts in the oldest Slovene, bound into a Latin Codex (manuscript book) from Freising in Bavaria. Four parchment leafs and a quarter of a page have been preserved. Linguistic, stylistic and contextual analyses reveal that these are church texts of careful composition and literary form.
The precise date of the origin of the Freising Manuscripts cannot be determined; the original text was probably written in the 9th century. They were discovered in 1807 in the Munich National Library during the examination of the manuscripts from Freising near Munich, which was once the centre of a diocese.
Bishop Abraham was active (from 957) in Freising during the time of the writing of the two manuscripts (sermons on sin and repentance, a confessional form), and also acquired a large estate of land in the Creina province around Škofja Loka. For this reason some linguists (e.g. Jernej Kopitar and Rajko Nahtigal) linked him closely to the origin of the Freising Manuscripts and, without any firm evidence, attributed him as being the author of one of the texts and suspected that he was of Slovene origin. Bishop Abraham died 1000 years ago, on 26 May 994.
The Freising Manuscripts are evidence of the thousand-year presence of the Slovenes in Europe. They are preserved in the Bavarian State Library in Munich.
To mark the thousand-year anniversary of the death of Bishop Abraham, linked to the Freising Manuscripts, the Republic of Slovenia is issuing three commemorative coins. On these coins, using the original script, are imprinted the words "Glagolite ponaz" with which the first Freising Manuscript begins.
Accessed at: https://www.bsi.si/en/banknotes-and-coins/slovenian-tolar/commemorative-editions-republic-of-slovenia/1000-years-anniversary-of-the-death-of-bishop-abraham-connected-with-the-freising-manuscripts-1994

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about the Non-circulating coin 5000 Tolarjev (Bishop Abraham - Freising Manuscripts) 1994 from Slovenia made of Gold (.900) weighing 7 g is that it was designed by the Slovenian artist, Marjan Pogačnik. The coin features an image of Bishop Abraham, a prominent figure in Slovenian history, and the Freising Manuscripts, a collection of medieval manuscripts that are considered to be of great cultural and historical significance to Slovenia. The coin's design is meant to symbolize the connection between the country's rich history and its cultural heritage.

Price

Date Mintage VG F VF XF AU UNC
1994  1000 - - - - - -

Values in the table are based on evaluations by sales realized on Internet platforms. They serve as an indication only for 5000 Tolarjev (Bishop Abraham - Freising Manuscripts) 1994 coin.