Czesław Miłosz [2]

Czesław Miłosz (1911 - 2004)

Subject: no
Face value: 2 pln
Alloy: (CuAl5Zn5Sn1) NG
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 8.15 g
Finish: standard
Mintage: 800000 pcs
On the edge: an inscription, NBP, repeated eight times, every second one inverted by 180 degrees, separated by stars
Additional: no
Date of issue: 2011-08-12
Issue price: 2 pln
In the centre, a stylised image of a bust of Czesław Miłosz. At the bottom, an inscription: CZESŁAW/MIŁOSZ. Below, and inscription: 1911-2004.

Designer: Robert Kotowicz
An image of the Eagle established as the State Emblem of the Republic of Poland. On the sides of the Eagle, the notation of the year of issue: 20-11; under the Eagle, an inscription: ZŁ 2 ZŁ. Along the rim, an inscription: RZECZPOSPOLITA POLSKA (Republic of Poland) preceded and followed by six pearls. The Mint’s mark: M/W, under the Eagle’s left leg.

Designer: Ewa Tyc-Karpińska

Shopping price comparison

If you want to have presented all the names of shops purchase subscription.
3.00
3.50
4.00
4.00
4.50

Auction and shop prices

If you want to have presented graphs auction prices purchase subsription.

Catalogue prices

If you want to have presented chart of catalog prices purchase subscription.

Statistics of investment

If you want to have the data presented in this chapter purchase subscription.

Assistant of investment

If you want to have the data presented in this chapter purchase subscription.

Article linked with this coin

Czesław Miłosz

Poet, prose writer and essayist, translator, author of several dozen books translated into numerous languages. Winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize and other prestigious literary awards, holder of honorary Ph. D. degrees of universities in the USA and in Poland, honorary citizen of Lithuania and the City of Cracow. Born on 30 June 1911 in Szetejnie (Šeteniai) in Lithuania, he made his debut as a poet in Vilnius, where he attended secondary school and the university. In 1937, he moved to Warsaw and lived there throughout the Nazi occupation. After the war, he worked at diplomatic posts of the communist People’s Republic of Poland – in the USA and France until February 1951, when he applied for political asylum in Paris. After 1960, when he left France, he worked ...

Read the full article