Hungary 2,000 Forint 2017. St. Margaret. Copper-Nickel-Zinc BU

Hungary 2,000 Forint 2017. St. Margaret. Copper-Nickel-Zinc BU



$19.50

 This base metal version of the gold coin honors the 775th birthday of an icon both religious and royal, St Margaret of Hungary. The daughter of King Béla IV of Hungary and Maria Laskarina, Margaret was born on January 27, 1242 and died on January 18, 1271. In a prayer to God when she was an infant, her father promised her to a religious life in return for an end to the persecution of his country by its enemies. She grew into an exquisitely beautiful woman and for that was offered marriage many times but she refused any idea of it. A Catholic biography of her calls her a “unique model ... for today’s modern young woman.”

Margaret is seen by followers as a paragon of self-discipline and Christian love. Despite her royal birth, she gladly performed the lowliest work and wore the worst clothes. She spent her days working and her nights praying. According to a Hungarian legend copied by Lea Raskay in 1510, Margaret could also foretell the future, which was sometimes helpful in solving her father’s diplomatic problems. She died at the Dominican monastery on Margaret Island. Her tomb was carved from red marble with some white marble parts around 1271 by the Lombard sculptors Albert and Peter. Together with the Dominican Order, her older brother, Stephen V (1270–1272), called for her canonization due to the miracles said to have occurred at her tomb. King Matthias also supported her canonization, but the Catholic Church only declared Margaret a saint centuries later. Veneration of Margaret was officially allowed in Hungary from 1789,and finally Pope Pius XII made her a saint on November 19, 1943, the feast day of her aunt, St. Elizabeth of Hungary.

In the Hungary of today, St Margaret's memory is also of a different sort. Margaret Island, in the Danube River in central Budapest is an oasis of green and one the city's most popular recreation areas.

The brilliant uncirculated  coin is made of a copper-nickel-zinc alloy, weighs 4.2 grams, and is 22 mm in diamter. Mintage is limited to 5,000 pieces. The obverse of the coin shows a view of the current ruins of the Dominican monastery on St. Margaret Island. The back features a profile of St. Margaret, based on a fresco by Simone Martini in Assisi, Italy.