The Chronos 2026 Gold Coin is the final chapter in the 2026 release chain.
The sentence, complete. Struck in 9999 fine gold to proof-like finish, issued by the Republic of Liberia, the gold edition carries the same clock face obverse and lemniscate reverse that define the trilogy — but in a metal that changes the meaning of every element it touches. The solar circle at the centre of the reverse. The inscription across the lower field. The face value in gold relief.
Ex cupro argentum, ex argento aurum. This is where the map ends.
Minted in just 300 pieces worldwide, the Chronos 2026 1/10 oz Gold Coin does embodies the end, struck to proof-like finish, issued by the Republic of Liberia, carrying the design that has defined this trilogy from its copper origin to its gold conclusion.
The obverse is the clock face in its most authoritative form. Where the silver edition plays the contrast of mirror field against open Roman numerals, the gold edition is monolithic — everything struck in the same metal, every element glowing with the same warm depth. The “Au” symbol crowns the dial at twelve o’clock. The sweep hands are frozen above a deeply engine-turned movement. The inscription runs across the lower field, as it does on every piece in the trilogy: Ex cupro argentum, ex argento aurum. From copper comes silver. From silver comes gold. On the gold coin, that line is not a promise. It is a statement of arrival.
The reverse carries the lemniscate — the symbol for infinity — in higher relief, its interior engine-turned fields catching light differently from the polished outer surface. At the centre, where the two loops of infinity cross, sits the solar circle: the alchemical symbol for gold, for the sun, for the metal that the ancient world considered most perfect because it does not tarnish, does not corrode, does not yield. Below it, the coat of arms of the Republic of Liberia. Around the inner ring: Fine Gold 9999 · 1/10 Troy Ounce. The gold coin is available in two weights: one full troy ounce (500 Dollars face value) and one tenth of a troy ounce (100 Dollars face value). Both carry the same design at the same fineness. The fractional edition allows those beginning the journey in gold to do so at a scale that fits their moment.
The trilogy begins in copper. It ends here.
Issued by Liberia. Designed by Alan Behul, MBA.