1926-1938, Complete Albania Set
The Zog era coins
***** The Set *****
The scope for this set encompasses the span of time frame that Zog was in power, as President or King. It includes both circulation and proof strikes, but does not include the ‘provas’, or trials.
This set is now retired. It was a lovely set to collect with some coins surprisingly difficult to locate, however it reached the point where to improve the set would require either adding the gold proofs and one last coin, or merely strive for upgrades.
***** Background *****
Ahmet Mutar Zogolli was born in 1895 to a feudal landowning family in the Mati area of what was then still part of the Ottoman Empire. His younger years included an education in Constantinople. He claimed descent via his maternal line from the sister of the great Albanian hero Prince Skanderbeg who managed a successful, though not permanent, rebellion against the Ottoman Empire in the 1400s.
Even though he was the second (surviving) son, Zogolli succeeded his father as leader in the region. As such he was one of the signers of the Albanian Declaration of Independence---separating Albania from the Ottoman Empire and forestalling dreams of annexation by other Balkan powers.
Ahmet Zogolli fought on the Austrian side during WWI and did not return to Albania until 1919 after spending two years in Vienna. Upon his return he entered politics including stints as Governor of Shkoder, Minister of Interior, and Chief of the military ultimately becoming Prime Minister. He also changed his last name from Zogolli to ‘Zogu’. Interestingly, Zogu translates to ‘bird’, which made for a very nationalistic name given the country’s eagle emblem.
In 1924 Zogu was briefly ousted, but returned as Prime Minister with the support of Yugoslav forces and he was ultimately elected President in 1925. At this point he was the leader of an impoverished, primarily rural country, where the remote villages were still essentially separate feudal regions run in the old Bey or serf style.
As President he was reputed to be ruthless and unforgiving to his enemies as he pulled the country together into a single, European modeled, government system. Though reportedly running the country as a police state, he also instituted such reforms as ending serfdom, instituting animal cruelty laws, and ‘banned the veil’ and otherwise forming a more 'European' nation.
However, to build the infrastructure and accomplish modernization Zogu required funds. This meant outside support from a modern nation, which was primarily obtained from Italy as Zogu was relatively ignored elsewhere.
In 1928 a constitutional monarchy was proclaimed and President Zogu became Zog I, King of Albania. When Zog assumed the title of King he also styled himself as Skanderbeg III based on his familial ties though this is not how he was commonly known.
As reforms continued forward the ties between Albania and Italy strengthened, apparently more than King Zog desired. He attempted to cultivate relationships with other European nations but his efforts were not significantly successful and Italy remained the primary supporter.
In 1938 King Zog married Countess Geraldine Apponyi, who was a half Hungarian, half American aristocrat. She was also Roman Catholic and was apparently partly chosen, from Zog's point of view, as a unifying force for the religiously diverse country. As a non-Muslim she also had the potential to open European ties. A real affection was also reported. Also, not being 'local', she would not confer favor to any one political faction over another.
By this point Italy was pressuring for more control in Albania, including defense positions and port control. Among other issues was the increasing demand to expulse Jewish Albanians which Zog refused to do. In fact Albania remained open for Jewish immigration and continued to issue visas in Berlin as late as 1938, which apparently infuriated Italy. (Albanians--Muslim and Christian--actively protected the Jewish Albanian population during the WWII, and the Jewish census increased from 200 at the beginning of the war to 2000 by the end).
On 5 April 1939 Queen Geraldine gave birth. On the 7th Italy invaded.
The Queen and household were evacuated over treacherous and mountainous roads, followed closely by Zog. This was not unanticipated as King Zog had been delaying his official response to a final demand from Italy which, among other things, would have greatly reduced Albanian’s independence. The King was able to leave with the greater part of the gold in the treasury. The 'bag-marked' appearance of so much of the otherwise uncirculated gold coins has been attributed to the rather rough and rapid transport of the gold coins.
Zog’s stated plan was to use the funds to return to Albania. But after WWII ended he received little external political support. The Communist faction gained control which precluded his return so the gold ultimately was used to sustain his household.
***** Coin Comments *****
Not unexpectedly Albanian coinage under Zog shows a clear Italian influence. The Italian Mint provided the designs and produced the majority of Albania’s coinage of the era. Italy’s King Victor Emmanuel was an avid coin collector and fan of the Roman neo-classical designs. This influence is reflected in the half leku featuring Hercules wrestling the Nemean lion, the full leku with Alexander the Great on horseback, a helmeted female reminiscent of Athen, and others.
Coins were struck in varying denominations between 1926 and 1938, though not every every year--or denomination within a given year--is represented. Proof coins of selected issues were minted and there are several ‘prova’ (specimen or trial) examples across the denominations and years. The provas are not included in the complete set presented here, though the proofs are.
Three mints are represented in the coinage with the vast majority being produced in Rome, with the ‘R’ mintmark. Vienna and London also had limited roles and are indicated by ‘V’ and ‘L’ respectively
The coin denominations were based on the ‘lek’, with its fractions, and the ‘frang ar’ and its multiples (and the plural of frang ar is franga ari).
The word lek or leku is derived from Alexander the Great—called Leka in Albanian. There are 5 lek to the franga (franc equivalent), and the the 5 franga a crown equivalent.
The Albanian word for one hundred is ‘qind’ so ‘qindarke’ (and its variants) are hundredths. 5 quindar leku thus means 5 hundredths of a lek. 1 quindar ari is 1 hundredth of a silver franga ar. Given the 5 lek to a franga, this makes the two denominations equivalent.
In 1926 the bronze 5 and 10 qindar leku were produced. The other denominations were the nickel ¼, ½, and 1 lek, the silver 2 and 5 franga ar (ar for silver), and the gold 10, 20 and 100 franga. The 5 and 100 franga denominations had variations with differing numbers of stars located beneath the bust of Zogu.
One of the more interesting denominations in the set is the 1926 20 franga ari. The set listing by NGC and Krause both indicate the 1926 gold coin has both a Zogu bust and a Skanderbeg bust (with the Lion of St. Mark reverse), both of which are indeed found in 1927.
Production of the 1926 Skanderbeg coin with the Rome (or ‘R’) mintmark included a small number of coins that had a prominent fasces adjacent to the mintmark. Of the 100 minted, 90 are listed as melted. They are not provas but a translation of an Albanian source calls them a trial. It would be reasonable to suspect the first hundred were minted, but were rejected due to the very Italian fasces. One of the contemporaneous banknotes was recalled as it featured a single headed eagle rather than the double. As it was ‘not Albanian’ the note was rejected. The prominent fasces on the coins could possibly have been seen as too Italian, and it would not be surprising if the dies were re-worked to remove the fasces. Purely speculation, but given the verbiage and the other events of the time it might explain both the limited run and the melting.
However, the Zogu bust version of the 20 FrA is not listed on the Bank of Albania website as a production coin (though this is not an error free page), nor has one been graded at either NGC or PCGS. In addition, a perusal of available auction and sales results does not show a 1926 Zogu bust 20 franga ari coin sold. A search through the classifieds of the Numismatist from 1926 forward revealed a single potential coin—a 1971 listing using the Friedberg number assigned to the Zogu bust. There was no photo and the price was consistent with the commonly found Skanderbeg bust.
It is entirely possible the absence of the coin is because it was never minted, were 100% melted, or were not included for some reason with the other gold coins that were taken out of the treasury with the fleeing King. However, given the number of collectors (including the King of Italy) it would seem that there would be at least a few examples seen if they had ever been minted and released, as there are of the fasces bearing Skanderbeg coins. Perhaps even the missing 1926 Zog bust coins had the same fasces and the entire mintage could have been withdrawn. Still a mystery.
With 1927 the bronze smaller denominations, the circulation silver 5 franga ari (provas exist and are heavily counterfeited), and the smaller gold denominations were dropped. Added was the silver 1 frang ar. As with 1926, there are variations of the 100 franga coin to include those with/without stars under the bust of Zogu. In this year both the Zogu and Skanderbeg busts are found on the 20 franga ari coin. The Skanderbeg coins bear the 'V' mintmark this year.
1928 is listed by Krause (and the set criteria) as having a silver 1 and 2 franga ar circulation coins. This is not supported by the Bank of Albania website, nor have there been examples graded. What was produced were prova sets and examples of these can be found. However, the bank site does have some errors noted and can’t be completely relied on.
In 1930 and 1931 the ½ and 1 leku were minted (in Vienna and London), including proof examples for 1931.
1935 saw the minting of the 1 and 2 ‘qindar ar’, denominations which were equal to the 5 and 10 ‘qindar leku’ respectively. As it is 5 leku to the silver 1 Frang Ar (or Fr ar) the 1 and 2 represent hundreths of the silver frang ar coin. The 1 and 2 frang ari were also minted this year.
1937 coins were minted to celebrate 25 years of Independence. The 1 frang ar had both a regular and commemorative reverse design. The silver 2 franga ari and gold 20 and 100 franga ari were of the commemorative style.
In 1938 only gold commemorative coins were minted. There were two versions, one to celebrate the 10th anniversary of King Zog’s reign as monarch, and another to celebrate the royal wedding. Both had the 20 and 100 franga ari denomination, and the sole representative of the 50 franga ari denomination is for the anniversary.
***The set is retired, notes for archival purposes***
The last collectible coin (the 1927 100 FrA with one star) did become available but after some ‘goal’ searching my decision was to let that one go and divert my efforts elsewhere.
Once it effectively reached the point of being a numbers chasing game (and over half my owned coins were already top pops), the set felt complete in my mind and it became time to move on.
Perhaps I could have bought the last coin just to ‘complete’ the set but as NGC does not have the archive feature I did not see the point.
Most of the set was consigned and sold at the NYINC sale conducted by Stacks&Bowers in 2023.
1926 5 Qindar Leku MS 67 RB Top Pop
1926 10 Qindar Leku MS 67 RB Top Pop
1935 Qindar Ar MS 67 RB Top Pop
1935 2 Qindar Ar MS 67 RB Top Pop
1926 1/4 Leku MS 67 Top Pop
1927 1/4 Leku MS 67 Top Pop
1926 1/2 Lek MS 67 Top Pop
1930 1/2 Lek MS 64
1931 1/2 Lek MS 62
1931 1/2 Lek PF 64 Top Pop
1926 Lek MS 67 Top Pop
1927 Lek MS 65 Top Pop
1930 Lek MS 65 Top Pop
1931 Lek AU 58 Top Pop
1931 Lek PF 65 Cam
1927 Frang Ar MS 67 Top Pop
1928 Frang Ar N/A *
1935 Frang Ar MS 66 Top Pop
1937 Frang Ar MS 63
1937 Frang Ar (Ind) MS 66 Top Pop
1926 2 Franga Ari MS 66 Top Pop
1927 2 Franga Ari MS 62 Top Pop
1928 2 Franga Ari N/A *
1935 2 Franga Ari MS 62
1937 2 Franga Ari MS 64 Top Pop
1926 5 Franga Ari no star MS 65
1926 5 Franga Ari one star MS 65+
1927 10 Franga Ari MS 64
1926 20 Franga Ari Zog N/A **
1926 20 Franga Ari PS MS 67
1926 20 Franga Ari Fasces MS 63 exTop Pop
1927 20 Franga Ari Zog MS 64
1927 20 Franga Ari PS MS 67 Top Pop
1937 20 Franga Ari (Ind) MS 64
1938 20 Franga Ari (wed) MS 66 Top Pop
1938 20 Franga Ari (wed)(PF) N/A ***
1938 20 Franga Ari (10th) MS 65
1938 50 Franga Ari (10th) MS 62
1926 100 Franga Ari no star MS 62
1926 100 Franga Ari one star AU 58
1926 100 Franga Ari two star MS 62
1927 100 Franga Ari no star MS 64 Top Pop
1927 100 Franga Ari one star N/A ^
1927 100 Franga Ari two star MS 62
1937 100 Franga Ari (Ind) MS 65
1938 100 Franga Ari (wed) MS 64
1938 100 Franga Ari (10th) MS 63
1938 100 Franga Ari (wed)(PF) N/A ***
* 1928 did not have circulation strikes, these may exist in prova form only
** 1926 20 FrA lists the Zog bust as minted, but none appear to exist
*** I did not attempt to collect the gold proofs
^ the one coin I did not purchase to complete the set閱讀全文