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This is a simple page designed to broadcast the numismatic objets d'art from L’île d’Héliopolis. I am extremely glad you found it on the Internet and I hope it is of interminable interest to you! Some of the most captivating coins in my collection come from self-declared micronations, non-territorial states, pseudo-états, nonexistent countries, and secessionist movements. Philatelists may be at an advantage, for they use the term “cinderella” stamps to categorize issuers of fantasy, apocryphal, spurious, and pretender items. For us, however, these entities are hard to define; but many of them can be found in Colin R. Bruce II's exceptional Unusual World Coins catalog. I encourage you to read my introductory essay about this distinct breed of coinage. I am referring to sources from which I have acquired at least one coin: Adventure Club, Afro Coin Mint/“United States of Africa”, American Open Currency Standard (AOCS), Ankh-Morpork, Empire of Antoninia, Kingdom of Araucania-Patagonia, Independent Republic of Arequipa, Atlantis, Atlantis (ATCOPS), Kingdom of Atlantis, Empire of Atlantium, Australia Fair, Grand Duchy of Avram, Axarquía, Azad Hind, Sovereign State of Barbe Island, Benelux, Kingdom of Bermania, Kingdom of Biffeche, Boys’ Republic of Civitavecchia/Boys’ Town of Rome, Isle of Brechou, Dominion of British West Florida, Buck Island, Republic of Camala/Republic of Malaca/Republic of Amalia, Campione d'Italia, Castorland, Cat Cay, Catalanist Union (Unió Catalanista), Sovereign Barony of Caux, Celestia (the Nation of Celestial Space), Cherokee Nation, United Cherokee Nation, Free City of Christiania, Conch Republic, Confederate States of America, Confederation of Antarctica, Federation of Damanhur, State of Deseret, Dixie Dollar, Republic of the Earth, Kingdom of Elleore, Euskal Herria (Basque Country), Evrugo Mental State, Ferdinandea (Graham Island), Flanders, Free State of Flaschenhals, Foundation for Cosmonoetic Investigations, Frederikssund (Møntklubben), Principality of Freedonia, Friesland, Friuli Homeland, Gallery Mint, George Junior Republic, Global Country of World Peace, Gold Standard Corporation, Graceland, Great Underground Empire (Kingdom of Quendor), Greenpeace, Grand Duchy of Greifenberg, HADEF (Hunger Aid and Development Foundation), Hutt River Province, International Foundation for Independence, Islamic Mint, Kaliningrad, Kingdom of Kamberra, United Federation of Koronis, Kumalongoola, Lasqueti Mint (Lasqueti Island, Gabriola Island, Cascadia), League of Nations, Regency of Lomar, “Luna”/“der Mond”, Lundy, Mattole Free State, City of Microna (Republic of Veshault/Kingdom of TorHavn), Republic of Minerva, Republic of Mirage Islands, Republic of Molossia, Republic of Monte Cristo, Free Commune of Moresnet (Neutral Moresnet), Na-Griamel Federation, NERO (New England Roleplaying Organization), Commonwealth of New Island, Principality of New Utopia, NORFED (Liberty Dollar), Northern Forest Archipelago, Nova Roma, Sultanate of Occussi-Ambeno, Principality of Outer Baldonia, Federal Republic of Padania/Lega Nord (Unione del Nord)/Repubblica del Nord, Principality of Paradise, Republic of La Parva Domus Magna Quies, Phoenix Dollar, Piedmontese Federalist Movement, Sovereign Nation of Poarch Creek Indians, Purple Shaftieuland, Québec, RCC (rec.collecting.coins), Kingdom of Riboalte, Rio-Grandensse Republic, Riviera Principality, Kingdom of Robland, Kingdom of Romkerhall, Royal Hawaiian Mint, State of Sabotage, Salt Spring Island, San Blas Islands, Republic of San Serriffe, Principality of Sealand, Principality of Seborga, Sovereign Nation of the Shawnee Tribe, Shenandoah Valley Free Money, Shire Post Mint, Historic Silver Valley, Society for Creative Anachronism, Ultimate State of Tædivm, Tarim (Arabia), Tender Island, Republic of Texas, Texas Mint, Kingdom of Torgu, Empire of Trebizond, Tyrolean Hour, Union of North America, United Maxxico America, United Nations, United Transnational Republics, Universala Ligo, “Utopia” (Mundus Unum), Principality of Vikesland, Vinland/Midhgardhr, Kingdom of Wallachia, Grand Duchy of Westarctica (Antarctic Territory), Principality of Wikingland, Xenostrov, Nation of YAN, Kingdom of Zamunda. This list would be far from complete without also including the pieces produced by Mr. Fred R. Zinkann (Adélie Land, Amsterdam and St. Paul Islands, Crozet Islands, Enderbyland, Kerguelen Islands, McMurdo [Station], Vostok [Station]) and Mr. William Turner (Abemana, Ile Crescent, The Most Serene Republic of Excelsior, Gaferut, Klef Raraha, Mägi Päiväine, Nuikviss Aoi, Pampapana, Viinamarisaar). For more information about most of these coins, please view the invaluable links I've compiled. I must also respectfully honor the unprecedented labor of Richard D. Kenney, whose posthumous compilation appeared in the ANA's The Numismatist between 1962-64. Even in the early 1950s, Mr. Kenney realized the beauty and collectibility of these unique coins. Perhaps this text has a familiar ring to it thus far; that is because portions of it have been copied from the Web-site of the first coin-emitting entity I concocted: Nichtsburg and Zilchstadt. No sooner had its initial coin been minted, than I began to enthusiastically tackle the designs for this current endeavor. I'm pretty sure, though, that this will be the final semi-geographical, make-believe “site” which I “sire”; especially the final fictional location which issues faux specie. The L’île d’Héliopolis coins are also based on my poetry. For years, I have been mesmerized by solar imagery and symbolism. It is a theme to which I return every now and again, and it never seems to lose its vitality and freshness. For each of these coins, I have taken fragments from some of those poems, and joined them together like a collage. The inaugural L’île d’Héliopolis 5 Çoles, dated 2004: For this particular coin, one of my original goals was that it be somewhat reminiscent of many of the municipal notgeld tokens that I admire. As a result, this Cinco Çoles (Five Suns) piece emanates not only from the central governing authority (in this case, the Isle of Heliopolis and its chimerical treasury), but more specifically, from another body within its insular boundaries: the alliterative Ligue des Fils et Filles du Soleil (League of the Sun's Sons and Daughters). The monetary unit is the Çol (Çoles being the plural), which is phonetically identical to the Peruvian Sol/Soles. The radiant symbol on the obverse is that of Shamash and his all-seeing light; this disc represented the Mesopotamian (Sumerian/Akkadian/Babylonian/Assyrian) solar deity approximately 3,000 years ago, though the actual sun-god is substantially more ancient. On the reverse, there is the legend Sonnenmünze der Sonnenkinder. This inscription hopes to affirm the special function of this piece as the “Sun-Coin of the Sun-Children”, one of which is borne by each of the depicted youths.
This coin is 39mm in diameter, and 3mm thick. It was minted by the Northwest Territorial Mint, in a run of 50 copper and 5 silver. I am sold out of all 2004 pieces. The L’île d’Héliopolis 3 Çoles Isleños, dated 2006: Essentially, the soulful gist of this coin is wholly in lockstep with the heliocentric leitmotif of its forerunner. Though an isleño may be a native/inhabitant of an island, the word can also be defined as: of, relating to, pertaining to, or befitting an isle. The obverse of this piece is emblazoned with an insignia whose perfectly balanced decorativeness is filled with symbolic significance. It is an age-old representation of the sun, inherent to the Zia/Tsia Pueblo, and which adorns the flag of New Mexico. According to their spiritual lore, riches were bestowed upon them by the “Giver of All Good Gifts” in orderly groups of four. This hallowed number is divinely embodied in the main directions of the earth, the seasons of the year, the segments of the day (sunrise/morning/dawn, noon/daylight, sunset/evening/dusk, night/darkness) and the stages/divisions of life itself (childhood/infancy, youth, adulthood, old age). All of these blessed bequests correspond to 16 linear rays which radiate from the center of a circle. These elements are everlastingly bound together at their bases by the orb, which epitomizes existence and love, both of which are without beginning or ending. Moreover, the tribe believes that in this great fellowship/alliance of all things, each person bears 4 sacred responsibilities/obligations: to develop a strong body, a clear mind, a pure spirit, and a devotion to the welfare of one's family/people. On the reverse of the coin, assisting its attainment of a full-fledged thematic denouement, are three Sun parakeets (Aratinga solstitialis in the taxonomy of Linnaeus; and in Portuguese, because this bird is indigenous to Brasil, Jandaia-sol). It is pleasant to imagine them as zoomorphic aspects, earthly manifestations of the omniscient sun, who frequents our world by adopting a sprightly animal form; who dons this lively guise and becomes inconspicuous by blending in with the tropical background; who, no longer hindered by the astounding distance of space, uses a feathery façade to gain sound, experiential insights while in our midst.
This coin is 36mm in diameter, and 3mm thick. It was minted by Pressed Metal Products, in a run of 54 copper and 11 silver (plus 2 pre-production samples: one in copper-nickel and one in brass). I am sold out of all 2006 pieces. The L'île d'Héliopolis Medio Çol, dated 2008: This coin completes the Heliopolitan triptych. Several years before I decided to produce medallions for Nichtsburg & Zilchstadt and L'île d'Héliopolis, I tried to imagine how a coin made of glass would look. This was actually my very first idea for a self-issued coin. The visual details of the piece would be realized through the process of frosting, thus giving a dull and lusterless finish to those decorative, non-transparent portions of the surface (we’ve all seen frosted areas on beer mugs). Sandblasting is one of the simplest and most versatile methods for achieving this effect. The results are very similar to acid etching. Both procedures produce smooth matte surfaces, but sandblasted areas can be slightly rougher to the touch. When a piece of glass is sandblasted, a jet of fine sand (or similar hard grit) is forced (from the nozzle of a sandblasting gun with the help of compressed air) against its surface, which removes the polish from the glass. Although sand can be used, more effective abrasive materials with less toxic effects are now available. Silicon carbide is commonly used, as is electro-corundum (aluminium oxide). The glass is normally placed inside a special cabinet with arm holes, a viewing window and dust extraction facilities. If required, parts of the design may be masked so the piece is only partially frosted. The technique of sandblasting was invented in 1870 by a Philadelphian named Benjamin Chew Tilghman. Legend has it that Tilghman had seen the effect of wind-blown sand on windows in the desert and/or prairies while a general in the army, and that this was the inspirational basis of his sandblasting invention. He filed a patent for this process (U.S. Patent Number 104,408) that same year, detailing many of the applications for which this technique is uniquely suited, such as sharpening files, engraving bottles, cleaning boilers or bringing out the grain in wood. Later that year, a patent was issued in the United Kingdom (U.K. Patent # 2147). He refined the technique for various purposes, whereby further patents and developments followed. Coincidentally, Tilghman graduated from the University of Pennsylvania which also happens to also be my alma mater in 1839. Mr. Alan produced a total of 25 glass medallions (plus 5 pre-production samples). Each one is 49mm in diameter, and 6mm thick. I am sold out of all 2008 pieces.
The actual Heliopolis (“City of the Sun”) was one of the oldest and most principal cities of ancient Egypt. Its Egyptian name was Iunu or Onu or Annu (“Pillar City”), and in the Bible it is called On. The site had been occupied since the Predynastic Period, with extensive building campaigns during the Old and Middle Kingdoms. According to Volume 5 of The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Heliopolis was “the seat of worship of the sun god, Re. It was the capital of the 15th nome [province] of Lower Egypt, but Heliopolis was important as a religious rather than a political centre. Its great temple of Re was second in size only to that of Amon at Thebes, and its priesthood wielded great influence, particularly during the 5th dynasty, when the worship of Re became the state cult. In the New Kingdom, the temple of Re-Horakhte became the repository of royal records.” Volume 14 of the Encyclopedia Americana explains that “From the 5th dynasty (beginning about 2500 B.C.) each pharaoh was called ‘Son of Re,’ and Heliopolis was the spiritual center of Egypt. The priests of the Temple of Re had great political power, and Herodotus states that they were reputedly the best historians in Egypt.” The site flourished as a famous seat of higher learning during the Greek period, and its schools of philosophy and astronomy are claimed to have been frequented by the Greek statesman Solon; the philosophers Pythagoras, Plato, Solon, Thales, Eudoxus are also said to have studied there. By the Ptolemaic dynasty, Egypt’s rulers probably took little interest in their “father”, Re. Thus, with the withdrawal of pharaonic favor, Heliopolis dwindled, and the students of native lore deserted it for other temples supported by a wealthy population of pious citizens. In addition, Heliopolis quickly declined after the founding of the Alexandrian Library, whereupon the scholarship of Alexandria permanently eclipsed the learning of Heliopolis. By the 1st century B.C., the town itself was almost uninhabited. When the Greek historian and geographer Strabo visited Heliopolis in 24 B.C., he found the schools and temples almost deserted. In Roman times Heliopolis belonged to the Augustamnica province. Fortunately, the mystical allure of Heliopolis still appeals to many people. The Heliopolitan coinage has been favorably received and warmly embraced by collectors worldwide (Andorra, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Spain, United Arab Emirates).
So if your sunny disposition finds Héliopolis appealing, perhaps you will reserve a spot in your collection for one of its handsome coins; right next to your Adelas, Decas, Ducals, Cali, Skaloj, Steloj, and all the other uncommon, privately-made coins of the unofficial “world”.
Additionally, I am always eager to learn of newfound numismatic objects that fall into this fascinating category, so if you know of any ou-topoi (Greek for “non-lands”, “non-places”, “non-loci”) or other peculiar localities (countercountries, microstates, “new country” projects, online/cyber-nations, virtual republics, quasi-states, phantom/imaginary/ephemeral/unrecognized governments, or model countries) which distribute their own coins, please let me know. Also, feel free to contact me if you just want to chat with another aficionado about these types of coins. To make your research easier, be sure to visit my extremely detailed list of e-mail addresses and Web-sites. Three cheers for coins from the “Lands-of-almost-but-not-quite”! Viva numismatic unusualness, even if from the most seldom-seen or unheard-of locales, however unreal!
E-mail: evm111@hotmail.com |
I am immensely elated to announce that 2 full-color postage stamps, dated 2004, have been professionally produced for L’île d’Héliopolis by Mr. Inzander Berenku, of Occussi-Ambeno's Imperial Government Printing Office (KDPN, Kantor Diraja Penchetakan Negara). In closing, I felt that it would be fitting to herein include my unabridged compilation of epigraphs. I have garnered these beautiful literary quotes over the years, and I intend to include them in a published anthology of all my sun-themed poetry. Enjoy!
On my isle
If the eye were not sun-like,
A sentence is an idea. An idea with urgency.
The glorious lamp of Heav'n, the radiant sun,
I am Azatiwatas,
Shadows are long and dark before me.
I ought to be thinking and talking
Ah, sunflower! Weary of time,
Opposite me laughs the city newly made:
Humor is an out-of-doors virtue.
The world sighs not; she sounds a song
Sun of being, Prince and Master!
The earth is mostly just a boneyard.
O what made fatuous sunbeams toil
The sun itself is but the dark simulacrum,
Praise to thee, my Lord, for all thy creatures,
The cheeks of our Saxon maidens
...the rounded
Everyone knows that in dreams one never sees the sun,
The sun never repents of the good he does,
How I shall freeze after all this sun!
The sun is the blanket of the poor. Mexican saying
There is nothing so destructive for spoken words
The sun never sets without fresh news. Xhosa proverb
Goodness comes out of people who bask in the sun.
The sun-dial counts only the bright hours. German proverb
During summer days I suffer from continued hunger,
I fall back dazzled at beholding myself all rosy red,
He was like a cock who thought the sun
He had been born to the sun.
I have a horror of sunsets,
The Sun is a mass of fiery stone,
This was my country and it may yet be,
Men shut their doors against a setting sun. Timon of Athens
Follow thy fair sun, unhappy shadow. Thomas Campion
Shadows are rare here.
Dazzling and tremendous how quick the sunrise would kill me,
And if we don't want our glory to be,
Whatever may be in my mind,
And when you envelop me
Joy is a light which devours itself, inexhaustibly;
When the sun comes out,
Even the smallest of creatures
Two bad cheers for the small sun. Thomas Merton
Some folks is born wid they feet on de sun
The sun, which passeth through pollutions
Thus the dream was transformed into a nightmare.
But nothing we can ever do is diametric to the sun. John Hay
It is good enough just to sit still
We are pieces of the sun,
We really know our worth,
Some painters transform the sun into a yellow spot;
Red was the sun’s most beautiful throne
He has an experience in which it appears to him
But every sun sets,
If not to the sun,
As on the day that brought thee to this earth
This is but an isle in the great sun
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