2005, Netherlands. Proof Gold 2 Ducats Coin. (6.98gm) 3,500 Struck! NGC PF69 UC!

Mint Year: 2005
Mint Place: Utrecht
Reference: KM-211.
Mintage: 3,500 pcs.
Denomination: Gold Knight 2 Ducats
Condition: Certified and graded by NGC as PF-69 Ultra Cameo, including also the original COA of issue and box!
Material: Gold (.983)
Diameter: 26mm
Weight: 6.98gm

Obverse: Armored knight standing right, shouldering sword and holding a bundle of arrows, flanked by privy marks. Date (20-05) split at sides.
Legend: CONCORDIA RESPARVAE CRESCUNT
Translated: "Through concord little things grow (Union is strength). "

Reverse: Legend in five lines inside ornate square. Fields around decorated with floral ornaments.
Legend: MO ORDI PROVIN FOEDER AD BELGEM IMPERII .
Expanded: "MOneta ORDinum PROVINciarum FOEDERatorum AD BELGicarum LEGem IMPerii"
Translated: "Coin of government of the provincial federation of Belgium Conforming with the law of the Imperial."


Beatrix of the Netherlands (born 31 January 1938) is a member of the Dutch royal family who reigned as Queen of the Netherlands from 30 April 1980 until her abdication on 30 April 2013.

Beatrix is the eldest daughter of Queen Juliana and her husband, Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld. Upon her mother's accession in 1948, she became heir presumptive. Beatrix attended a public primary school in Canada during World War II, and then finished her primary and secondary education in the Netherlands in the post-war period. In 1961, she received her law degree from Leiden University. In 1966, Beatrix married Claus von Amsberg, a German diplomat, with whom she had three children. When her mother abdicated on 30 April 1980, Beatrix succeeded her as queen.

Beatrix's reign saw the country's Caribbean possessions reshaped with Aruba's secession and becoming its own constituent country within the Kingdom in 1986 as well as the subsequent Antillean Dissolution in 2010, which created the new special municipalities of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius, and Saba, and the two new constituent countries of Curaçao and Sint Maarten.

On Koninginnedag (Queen's Day), 30 April 2013, Beatrix abdicated in favour of her eldest son, Willem-Alexander, and resumed the title of princess. At the time of her abdication at age 75, Beatrix was the oldest reigning monarch in the country's history.