Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Cyrillius

1 Ruble (Hamza Hakim-zade Niyazi) – Soviet Union

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Hamza Hakim-zade Niyazi
Russia
Context
Year: 1989
Country: Russia Country flag
Issuer: Soviet Union Issuer flag
Period:
(1922—1991)
Currency:
(1961—1991)
Demonetization: 1991
Total mintage: 2,000,000
Material
Diameter: 31 mm
Weight: 12.8 g
Thickness: 2.3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard232
Numista: #13995
Value
Exchange value: 1 SUR

Obverse

Description:
USSR coat of arms; value, date.
Inscription:
СССР

1

РУБЛЬ

1989
Translation:
THE USSR

1

RUBLE

1989
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Reverse

Description:
Portrait with name in a Russian handwritten half-circle, birth and death years above a book on the right.
Inscription:
ХАМЗА ХАКИМ-ЗАДЕ НИЯЗИ

1889

1923
Translation:
Khamza Hakim-zade Niyazi

1889

1923
Script: Cyrillic
Languages: Russian, Uzbek

Edge

Smooth with the inscription
Legend:
ОДИН РУБЛЬ • ОДИН РУБЛЬ •
Translation:
ONE RUBLE • ONE RUBLE •
Language: Russian

Mints

NameMark
Saint Petersburg

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19891,800,000
1989200,000Proof

Historical background

By 1989, the Soviet Union's currency situation was a critical symptom of its deepening economic crisis. The official state ruble was increasingly divorced from economic reality, maintained at an artificially high exchange rate and rendered unconvertible on world markets. This "wooden ruble" masked severe underlying problems: a vast monetary overhang where citizens held large savings in rubles but faced chronic shortages of desirable goods in state stores. The result was a potent combination of suppressed inflation and a booming black market, where goods were available but at prices far exceeding state levels, and where the US dollar operated as a far more trusted shadow currency.

The root cause was the collapse of the command economy. Massive, inefficient state subsidies to unprofitable industries and the military-industrial complex were financed by simply printing money, while price controls on essential goods remained frozen for decades. This created a grotesque imbalance: too many rubles chased too few quality goods. The policy of uskoreniye (acceleration) and early reforms under Gorbachev had failed to increase the production of consumer goods, instead further inflating the money supply through wage increases and costly campaigns like the anti-alcohol initiative, which drained state revenue.

Consequently, 1989 was a year of looming monetary reckoning. The concept of a market transition forced the leadership to confront the ruble's fiction. Discussions began about a painful currency reform (which would materialize in 1991) to confiscate excess cash and restore monetary balance, while debates raged over introducing a convertible "hard ruble." The currency's weakness paralyzed foreign trade, as Western partners demanded payment in hard currency. Ultimately, the crumbling ruble in 9symbolized the loss of economic control and public trust, foreshadowing the monetary chaos and hyperinflation that would engulf the post-Soviet states in the early 1990s.
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