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The 2½ Gulden issued in 1960 by the Netherlands is a coin struck in silver with a fineness of 720?, corresponding to an alloy composed of 72% silver. It has a weight of 15 grams and a diameter of 33 millimetres, dimensions characteristic of this denomination within the Dutch monetary system of the time.
This coin was issued under the authority of Queen Juliana, who reigned over the Netherlands from 1948 to 1980. Her effigy traditionally appears on the obverse of this coin, in accordance with Dutch royal numismatic conventions. The coin was struck by the Utrecht Mint, the historic institution responsible for the production of Dutch coinage.
With a mintage of 12,800,000 pieces, this issue represents a relatively large production, reflecting the everyday monetary needs of the Netherlands at the turn of the 1960s. The face value of 2.5 gulden made it one of the highest-value coins in circulation within the national monetary system prior to the adoption of the euro.
The 2½ Gulden, also known as the « rijksdaalder » in Dutch monetary tradition, is an emblematic denomination in the numismatic history of the Netherlands. The silver composition of 720 thousandths is characteristic of post-war European monetary policies, where reduced-silver alloys were favoured for circulating coinage, replacing the higher-silver-content strikes used previously.