Spitsbergen 50-KOPEKS¶
- Composition
- Aluminum
- Country
- Spitsbergen
- Approx. Size
- 25mm
- Area
- Oceans
- Animal Class
- Mammals
- Species
- Walrus
- KM#
- 11
Although Spitsbergen is a Norwegian territory, these are Russian coins minted in St. Petersburg for Russian coal miners working on the island. The walrus on top of the world looks a little grumpy, but who wouldn't be grumpy in a place where night lasts for almost 6 months.
It is possible that these coins never actually circulated among the workers of the Arktikugol mining company, but it is hard to determine. They're too cool to exclude from zoo, even if they didn't get used.
The inscription on the obverse reads "Spitsbergen" over top of the walrus, and the smaller word underneath is "Arktikugol" (Arctic Coal).
Spitsbergen¶

- Area
- Oceans
Spitsbergen (sometimes mispelled "Spitzbergen"), part of the Svalbard archipelego, is a barren mountainous island -- the name means "pointy peaks" -- in the Arctic Ocean that is closer to the North Pole than it is to the Arctic Circle. Lots of countries squabbled over this territory, mainly due to whaling interests, and in 1920 it was agreed it would go to Norway (almost 600 km due south).
There may be up to three settlements on the island, or there may only be one active settlement left today. It would be hard to hang around a place where night basically starts in late October and lasts until mid-February.
The Russian mining company Arktikugol set up camp here in 1932, and issued coins (tokens, really) for the workers in 1946, 1993, and 1998.


