Polish central banking [200]

180 years of central banking in Poland

Subject: no
Face value: 200 pln
Alloy: 900/1000 Au
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 15.5 g
Finish: proof
Mintage: 8500 pcs
On the edge: smooth
Additional: no
Date of issue: 2009-03-30
Issue price: 2110 pln
On the right side, a stylized image of Ksawery Drucki-Lubecki. Below, an inscription: KSAWERY/DRUCKI-LUBECKI. In the background, the head office of the Bank of Poland in Bankowy square in Warsaw. At the top, on the left side, an inscription: 1828/2008. In the rim, an inscription: 180 LAT BANKOWOŚCI CENTRALNEJ W POLSCE.

Designer: Ewa Tyc-Karpińska
In the center, an image of the Eagle established as the State Emblem of the Republic of Poland. Above the Eagle, the notation of the year of issue, 2009. Below the Eagle, an image of the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Poland from the times of the November Uprising. On the left side of the coat of arms an inscription: 200, on the right side of the coat of arms an inscription: ZŁ. At the top, a semicircular inscription: RZECZPOSPOLITA POLSKA. The Mint's mark, M/ W, under the Eagle's left leg.

Designer: Ewa Tyc-Karpińska

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Article linked with this coin

180 years of central banking in Poland

The origins of central banking in Poland - as in many European countries - go back to the first decades of the XIX century. The first Polish issuing bank was the Bank of Poland established in 1828 in the Kingdom of Poland. It was a state bank, with its share capital coming from governmental funds. It performed issuing tasks (zloty-denominated bank notes exchangeable for silver coins), operated as the bank of the state (servicing public debt, keeping public institutions' deposits and funds), and functioned as a credit and deposit bank providing support for the development of the state industry and infrastructure. In 1870 its issuing privileges were taken away by the Russian authorities and consequently, in 1886, the Bank of Poland went into liquidation. The bank's ...

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