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Euskal Herria
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page was made possible by the combined effort of diverse members of the
USNS

Unrecognised States Numismatic
Society
Disclaimer: I
have no political affiliation or sympathies with any of the political groups
mentioned on my site, nor do I wish to support them or provide them with a
platform for their ideas. These listings are mentioned solely for reason of
completeness, i.e. the existence of numismatic issues made by these groups.
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1990
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USNS-EUS-C 001
Year: 1990
Metal: white metal
Condition: UNC
Designer:
Mint:
Mintage: unknown
Weight: 4.88 grams
Diameter: 22.5 mm.
Denomination: 1 Nabarro
Edge type: Plain & reeded sections
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USNS-EUS-C 002
Year: 1990
Metal: white metal
Condition: UNC
Designer:
Mint:
Mintage: unknown
Weight: 4.50 grams
Diameter: 24.5 mm.
Denomination: 5 Nabarro
Edge type: Plain & reeded sections
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USNS-EUS-C 003
Year: 1990
Metal: white metal
Condition: UNC
Designer:
Mint:
Mintage: unknown
Weight: 8.01 grams
Diameter: 25.5 mm.
Denomination: 25 Nabarro
Edge type: Plain & reeded sections
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USNS-EUS-C 004
Year: 1990
Metal: white metal
Condition: UNC
Designer:
Mint:
Mintage: unknown
Weight: 9.75 grams
Diameter: 28.5 mm.
Denomination: 100 Nabarro
Edge type: Plain & reeded sections
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USNS-EUS-SET 01
Year: 1990
included:
4 coins (EUS-C001-C004) in pink cardboard
folder
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EUSKAL
HERRIA (BASQUE COUNTRY): This designation refers to an
area of the Iberian Peninsula
which is historically, ethnically, and culturally Basque. This includes the
four Spanish provinces of Vizcaya, Guipúzcoa, Álava, and Navarra, as well as
the three former French provinces of Labourd/Lapurdi, Basse-Navarre/Nafarroa
Beherea, and Soule/Zuberoa (now officially incorporated into the French
department of Pyrénées-Atlantique). Upon closer inspection, the reality of
Euskal Herria is more complicated, though. There is no clear-cut homogeneity
to the region. A good part of the population living in the seven “historic
territories” does not want to be included in a so-called Basque Country. That
is the case of most of the Basques living in France and, above all, the
people of Navarre.
But Basque nationalists are convinced, on linguistic and anthropological
grounds, that Nafarroa is the heartland of their unmistakably unique nation.
The Vascons of Navarre are viewed as the ancestors of the Basque people (who
are the only remaining pre-Aryan race in Europe),
as the mountainous north of Nafarroa is still partly Basque-speaking. And the
semi-autonomous Kingdom of Navarre
is the only entity to have exercised political authority over the entire
landscape to which the Basques now lay claim. The great majority of
Navarrese, however, consider their domain to be quite distinct from the
Baskongadak (Bizkaia and Gipuzkoa, and Araba), which between 1200 and 1332
had left Nafarroa and were incorporated into the Crown of Castile, although
without giving up their traditional institutions. Navarre, in
turn, was invaded and occupied by Castile in 1512.
Whatever its boundaries, the País Vasco has experienced many momentous ups
and downs. Throughout the Middle Ages, the Basque provinces, north
and south, were largely self-governing and they had a vigorous tradition of
local democracy. Over time, Basque autonomy was gradually stymied by the
powers-that-be, but the Basques have continuously fought to preserve their
own forms of government. In the north zone (Iparralde), Basque rights were
abruptly swept away by the French Revolution. In the south zone (Hegoalde),
self-determination lasted longer, but in the 19th century it came under
attack from centralist governments in Madrid, culminating in a series of
major civil insurrections known as the Carlist Wars (1833-39, 1846-49, 1872-1876).
When these rebellions erupted, they took place in Cataluña, Navarra, and the
País Vasco. The Basques, siding with the more conservative faction of King
Carlos V and/or his descendants, battled against the superior forces of Spain with
unsuccessful results. As a consequence of the Carlist defeats, the age-old
provincial fueros were abolished. The fueros of the feudal era were a
collection of special rights — a set of local laws — which regulated their
political system and protected their independence. These compilations, which
included privileges and exemptions specific to an identified class, were
habitual practices which influenced their customs of law and governance. This
ancestral scheme had allowed the Basque Country to retain a separate constitutional
identity and a separate legal/financial administration under a regional
aristocratic oligarchy. The foral rights of each province were not identical,
however, and the Spanish Crown had never treated the País Vasco as a single
political unit.
The
Basques, by the way, call their language Euskara (Euskera and Eskuara being
dialect variants). It is the linchpin of Basque national identity. The word
Euskaldun (literally, “one who has Basque”) means “Basque-speaker”; the
plural is Euskaldunak, and this is what the Basques commonly call themselves.
Linguistically, Basque (including its ancestral form, the ancient
pre-Indo-European Aquitanian tongue) has no relatives and absolutely cannot
be shown to be related to any other language anywhere in the world.
Though
there has clearly been a Basque culture and language for many centuries, some
historians suggest that the concept of the ‘Basque nation’ was a creation of
the 1890s. Seen in this light, the “invention” of Basque nationalism and
cultural-linguistic revival was a prerequisite in the expanding struggle for
the retrieval of lost sovereignty. The essence of Basque nationalism was to
safeguard their time-honored conventions and to defend their ethnicity
against contamination by the Spanish. The movement appealed most strongly to
those displaced or still embedded in a traditional economy, such as
agriculturalists and artisans; it attracted members of the pre-industrial
Vizcayan society, all threatened by liberalism, who were being marginalised
by processes of modernisation and who were faced with the corruption of their
values and the collapse of their cherished socio-cultural order. Industrialisation
and urbanisation encouraged immigration to the Basque Country, causing the
villagers and peasants to become bitterly resentful towards capitalism, which
would only dilute the regional homogeneousness they'd envisioned. From the
late 1800s, the Spanish Basques, fearing for their language and their
culture, began pressing for reforms and for greater self-rule. These were
strictly peaceful campaigns, which in their lack of clear-cut leadership were
oftentimes beset by internal differences of opinion regarding which
ideological path (autonomy versus independence) would be the best one to
take.
The
Basque Nationalist Party, founded in 1895 by Sabino de Arana y Goiri, remains
the largest and most dominant political party in the País Vasco. In Basque it
is called Eusko Alderdi Jeltzalea (EAJ), and in Castilian it is called the
Partido Nacionalista Vasco (PNV); in Spain it is commonly
referred to as EAJ-PNV. Arana, though his movement initially drew little
support and was known as Vizcayanism, is considered by many to be the father
of Basque nationalism. He also coined the neologism Euzkadi (“Basque State”); the
term, which refers to the 3 provinces of the Baskongadak, is still used
today.
By
the early 20th century, “regional micronationalism” had begun to develop in Catalonia and the Basque provinces. From
1923-30, during the military dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera, the Basque
community endured severe repression and their chronically weakened
nationalist movement was outlawed and forced underground; it then flourished
briefly when the ban was lifted after the proclamation of the Second Republic
in April 1931. When autonomy was granted to Cataluña, the Basque
nationalists, inspired by Arana and led by PNV chief José Antonio de Aguirre,
began a large-scale, well-planned campaign for Basque autonomy. Three out of
four the Basque provinces'
assemblies of local councillors voted in favour of forming an autonomous
Basque region within the Spanish state, while the delegates from Navarre voted
narrowly against the proposal. But a military coup in 1936 led to the
outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (July '36-April '39). The Nationalist generals
who were involved in the insurgency appointed General Francisco Franco, one
of the leaders of the uprising, as Commander-in-Chief and Head of State.
Meanwhile, the Republican Government in Madrid had
already approved the Statute which finally granted the Baskongadak its
official autonomy. However, it was only applied to Guipuzcoa and Vizcaya
because by then a rift among Basques had developed. In October 1936, Aguirre
was sworn in as first Lehendakari (president) of the short-lived Government
of Euskadi. His first actions were to pronounce the Ikurriña (the Basque flag
that was designed in 1894 by Sabino Arana and his brother Luis) as official
and to create the Basque army and University. But in 1937, the Nationalist
Army mounted a great offensive against Bizkaia. They entered and seized Bilbao, the
Basque capital, which finally collapsed at the hands of Franco's troops by
September. Although Aguirre was forced to flee the country shortly
thereafter, he established a government-in-exile and maintained the position
of Lehendadari until his death in 1960. During this timeframe, Basque
alienation and radicalisation grew. The Basques suffered terribly in their
fight against Franco's brutally oppressive personal dictatorship. Since they
had sided with the Republican government during the Civil War, the Basques
found themselves particularly singled out for persecution and revenge by the
Fascist regime. Franco suppressed or restricted virtually all expressions of
Basque culture and forbade all outward signs of their identity. This included
exhibiting the nationalist flag, and partaking of any nationalist
celebrations. The very speaking of Basque in public and teaching it in
classrooms were prohibited; even baptising children with non-Spanish names
was illegal. Basque separationists who had not managed to hide or flee into
exile were imprisoned, tormented, condemned to forced labour, and even shot.
Thus, the protracted dictatorship had the counterproductive effect of
re-awakening intensely independentist feelings and of sparking a more ardent
nationalist identity in the Basque
provinces. Permitted no legal
voice, the Basques gradually began to congregate clandestinely to discuss
possible options. Their sovereignty movement, contemplating more active
resistance, began to evolve in the 1950s. Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (Basque
Fatherland and Liberty), a well-known, radical group which even today still
seeks to create an independent state, was founded by a band of student
activists who were dissatisfied with the moderate opposition of the
traditional Basque party. Originally called EKIN (from the Basque for “get
busy”) since its inception in 1953, this nationalist group
re-named/reconstituted itself as ETA in 1959. Their split from the PNV
apparently took place because its restless young founders felt that the older
organisation, characterised by a non-confrontational style, was not acting
energetically enough to advance the Basque cause. ETA, which was one of
several groups that formed a part of the Movimiento de Liberación Nacional
Vasco (MLNV), was the only militant faction to emerge in Spain during
the Franco era. Throughout this period, they had accrued considerable popular
support from even beyond the Basque populace. On their home turf, many
countrymen joined ETA's secessionist stance, and the roots of this heightened
sympathy arose from the authoritarian state's unending attempts to ruthlessly
destroy the nationalistic aspirations of the Basque. At first, ETA's tactics
were deliberately non-violent, but the sustained ferocity of the Spanish
police and courts (domestic searches, arbitrary arrests, routine beatings,
interrogations accompanied by torture, lengthy jail sentences, widespread
abuse) eventually pushed ETA perilously into the realm of armed resistance
(naturally, there are numerous other left-wing Basque nationalist groups, who
valiantly disapprove of such methods). In this tumultuous and riotous
climate, ETA's soldiers retaliated with intensified bloodshed and vowed to
passionately fight for a fully independent homeland. Though their military
actions were initially directed towards known torturers and murderers from
amongst the Spanish authorities, the ensuing warfare gradually escalated into
increasingly indiscriminate shootings and bombings. The Francoist system
responded with ever greater combative cruelty of its own; all of its security
forces (National Police, Civil Guard, secret police) assaulted and murdered
Basques with total impunity. In December of 1973, ETA's “freedom fighters”
managed to assassinate the Spanish Prime Minister, Admiral Luis Carrero
Blanco, who was most likely the intended successor of the aging Generalísimo.
This event, which actually was received positively in many Basque circles,
may have significantly hastened the end of Spanish fascism. The dictator's
long rule finally came to an end in 1975. Franco's death elevated Don Juan
Carlos de Borbón to the monarchy. Once in power as King Juan Carlos I, he
facilitated the transition toward the current democratic state. Elections
were once again held in post-Franco Spain, leading
to the establishment in 1979 of the Euskal Autonomia Erkidegoa (Comunidad
Autónoma del País Vasco, Basque Autonomous Community); this was the name
adopted by the 3 provinces of the Baskongadak, which, prior to the Spanish
constitution of 1978, were still known by the antiquated term Provincias
Vascongadas. The Basque districts were now able to wield considerably
wide-ranging powers. They were given their own police force, their own
parliament, and they were granted a broad degree of control over issues such
as taxation and education. An innovative policy of region-specific
bilingualism meant that the distinctive Basque language and culture could
once again be promoted in Basque-run schools. Many exiles returned from abroad.
This outcome satisfied most of the people in Euskal Herria, and many
supporters of ETA quietly left the separatist organisation to resume normal
lives. However, for a minority in the ETA committed to armed struggle, this
partial autonomy was not enough. The modest number of remaining hard-core
members tenaciously believed that Basques should secure complete freedom from
Spain,
and to this non-negotiable end the urban guerrillas have continued a chaotic
program of destructiveness all over Spain. They
fear that anything less than full liberation would spell the end of their
cultural, linguistic, and national identity within a very short time (adding
urgency to their demands has been the weakness of Euskera — which many of
them feel is on the verge of annihilation — as a regional language). Grupos
Antiterroristas de Liberación (GAL), illegally directed and financed by
officials in the Ministry of Interior, were active from 1984-86. These
paramilitary groups and death squads were composed of undisciplined, off-duty
members of the security forces (as were their predecessors, ATE and BVE); its
mercenaries, many of whom would later be accused of war crimes and other
heinous atrocities, carried out further killings and waged a “dirty war”
against Basque activists and their property. In recent years, though security
forces and politicians have become the main targets of the fervent
hardliners, countless innocent lives (prominent Basques and civilian
bystanders) have been lost. ETA has also engaged in bank robberies, kidnappings,
intimidation, graffiti, and extortion (collecting a “revolutionary tax” from
businesses in Basqueland). What distinguishes the Basque conflict is its
intractability despite significant concessions granted by the 1978 Spanish
constitution and in subsequent legislation. While Catalonia has
worked within the framework of these delegated powers to strengthen its
regional language, culture, and economy, violence continues to fester in the
even more autonomous País Vasco. Another province that has made a smoother,
less troublesome changeover is the Comunidad Foral de Navarra (Free Community
of Navarre), which was formed in 1982.
There
are 4 different Euskal Herria coins. A 1 Nabarro showcasing a map of the
Basque-speaking territory, a 5 Nabarro displaying the national flag, the
Ikurriña, a 25 Nabarro piece which shows the Casa de Juntas/Assembly House and
the Sacred Oak Tree of Gernika (Guernica) and a 100 Nabarro piece that shows
the Arrano Beltza (“Black Eagle”), a modern Basque nationalist version of the
ancient arms of the Kingdom of Nafarroa, which signify its unity. All the
pieces feature the same obverse, which depicts the Euskal Herria coat-of-arms;
it contains 6 shields, representing its 7 historical herrialdes (provinces) —
Nafarroa Beherea (also known as Behenafarroa, Behenabarra, Benabarre) and
Nafarroa still share the same emblem. Underneath the heraldic device, there
is an unfurled banner which says “ABERRI EGUNA”; this, the “Day of the
Fatherland”, is the Basque national holiday which has been held since 1932
and which is always celebrated in conjunction with Easter. The decorative
streamer also contains the date of the pieces, 1990.
The
4-coin set was produced by Herri Batasuna (Popular Unity), which was founded
in April 1978, by a coalition of leftist/nationalist groups and individuals
who had voted against the Spanish constitution. Considered to be the most
militant of all the Basque political parties, its constituent elements had
originally been called together in 1977 by senior Basque nationalist
Telesforo de Monzón. They backed the aims/goals of ETA so fully, that HB was
alleged to be the political arm/wing of ETA. HB spokesperson Arnaldo Otegi
was once quoted as saying “You could say we are the last indigenous people in
Europe. We are
very deeply attached to our land.” From 1998-2001, Herri Batasuna assumed the
name Euskal Herritarrok (Basque Citizens). In '01, HB then dissolved to join
Batasuna, a partnership formed to unite all the leftist pro-independence
groups in the entire Basque territory. Batasuna is also a principal part of
the MLNV, and its officials deny that they are linked to ETA. Though it has
been banned in Spain
since 2003, the faction is not illegal in France.
According to the text which accompanied the coins, “Today more than ever the
desire of our people to regain their sovereignty is patently clear, proof of
this being the important occurrences and public demonstrations which to that
effect are taking place in recent days.” Therefore, for the Aberri Eguna of
1990, “Herri Batasuna wanted to offer a sample of what had been the complete
sovereignty of the Kingdom of Navarre,”
so they decided to issue their own coins, just like the bygone monarchy had
done. As it were, one of the final pieces made by Navarre was
known as the “navarro de oro”. Therefore, the denomination chosen by HB “is
the same as that of yesteryear, namely, ‘Nabarro’, but we made the design
suitable to the present-day sentiment of the group of inhabitants of Euskal
Herria.” Herri Batasuna intended their tokens “to serve as a reminder of our
history” and to act as a memento of that year's celebration. They also hoped
the coins would spur all Basques to continue striving towards nationhood, and
serve as incentive for everyone to keep contributing his or her own “small
grain of sand”, each one so very necessary “in the construction of this new
free and supreme Euskal Herria for which we fight.”
The
coins were sold at rustic bars, known as Herriko Tabernas (people's taverns),
that were affiliated with Herri Batasuna. The use of these modest
establishments, commonly found in all the villages and small towns, came
about from the need of the political parties to have places where they could
assemble and conduct meetings. Their partisans began financing these social
businesses (where their compatriots would often work for no pay), and there
eventually arose a network of “txoko-tabernas” (corner-taverns) throughout the
Basque territory, where the political parties could be directly connected to
the people.
© 2007 Tædivm / C.D. Shiboleth. Background
information courtesy of E.V.M. McCrea, Scans & numismatic information courtesy
of J.L. Perello and C.D. Shiboleth. Layout thanks to G. Cruickshank / USNS.
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