Idolenz
I can't even remember authorising the move from Japan to the East Indies. Non of these coins ever circulated or even arrived there in large amounts and I think my position never changed in that regard. But I have no access to the change history to check if I'm wrong.
I am trying to figure out what is going on from a catalog history viewpoint, and what the correct approach should be.
First, the 1 Sen and 10 Sen coins were entered into the catalog a long time ago (2011), and appear to have always had NEI as issuer as far as I can tell.
The 5 Sen coin was entered in 2015 with Japan as issuer. It looks like the issuer was changed to NEI earlier this year, probably to be consistent.
Additionally, it looks like the coins were attached to a currency Gulden 1942-44 during a big overhaul of the Numista currency/denomination system in 2024. But I believe this is incorrect for these coins. Although there were guilder denominated banknotes during the Japanese occupation, if these coins say “Sen” on them, I don't think they can be in a Gulden currency system.
@Idolenz I think if these were produced for use in NEI, then it is appropriate for them to remain there, even if they never circulated. I'll also ask for @Jarcek to comment in case there is a better approach.
My proposal would be:
- create a Yen currency for NEI for 1942-44 to cover use of these (Japanese) denominations, and attach them correctly.
- categorize them as non-circulating. If many millions were produced, they can't be patterns.