Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Uppsala Universitet, CC0
Context
Years: 1910–1941
Issuer: Sweden Issuer flag
Ruler: Gustaf V
Currency:
(since 1873)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 36,906,276
Material
Diameter: 16.95 mm
Weight: 2.42 g
Silver weight: 1.45 g
Thickness: 1.3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 60% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard785
Numista: #1505
Value
Exchange value: 0.25 SEK = $0.03
Bullion value: $4.07

Obverse

Description:
Shield with Sweden's three crowns divides date; country name below.
Inscription:
19 32

SVERIGE
Translation:
SWEDEN
Script: Latin
Language: Swedish

Reverse

Description:
Two lines of value above the Stockholm Mint symbol, encircled by a laurel branch. Below the branch is the Riksbank Governor's initial.
Inscription:
25

ÖRE

G
Translation:
Twenty-five Öre
Script: Latin
Language: Swedish

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Kungliga Myntet

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19102,043,936
19121,013,740
19143,719,232
19161,269,720
19171,657,312
1918
19193,205,164
19271,687,984
1928836,895
19291,124,931
19303,489,628
19311,391,938
19321,133,344
1933964,340
19341,403,648
19361,852,000
1937Proof
1937
19383,678,876
19392,136,600
19402,301,788
19411,995,200

Historical background

In 1910, Sweden operated under the classical gold standard, a system it had formally adopted in 1873 alongside Denmark and Norway to form the Scandinavian Monetary Union (SMU). This system defined the Swedish krona (krona, plural kronor) as a fixed quantity of gold, ensuring its value was stable and internationally convertible. The SMU was highly successful in its early decades, allowing Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian coins to circulate freely in all three countries as legal tender, effectively creating a single currency area that facilitated trade and economic integration.

By the dawn of the 20th century, however, the monetary landscape was becoming more complex. While the union remained officially intact, the financial strains of World War I were on the horizon. In 1905, the political union between Sweden and Norway was dissolved, creating underlying tensions within the Monetary Union. Furthermore, the period saw a global shift from circulating gold and silver coins to greater use of paper banknotes and demand deposits. Sweden's Riksbank, the world's oldest central bank, managed the currency's gold backing, but the system's rigidity was increasingly tested by growing international capital flows and the expanding needs of a modern industrial economy.

Consequently, the currency situation in 1910 represented the tail end of an era of remarkable monetary stability. The krona was a trusted and solid currency, its value anchored firmly to gold. Yet, the foundations of the system upon which it relied—the Scandinavian Monetary Union and the international gold standard—were showing early signs of fragility. Within a few years, the outbreak of World War I would force Sweden, like most nations, to suspend gold convertibility, ending this period of fixed stability and ushering in an age of managed currencies.

Series: 1910 Sweden circulation coins

25 Öre obverse
25 Öre reverse
25 Öre
1910-1941
1 Krona obverse
1 Krona reverse
1 Krona
1910-1942
2 Kronor obverse
2 Kronor reverse
2 Kronor
1910-1940
🌱 Very Common