Kłodzko — known as Glatz under German administration — sits in a fortified basin in Lower Silesia that changed hands repeatedly between Bohemia, Prussia, and Poland over several centuries. The town's massive hilltop fortress, begun in the 14th century and expanded by the Prussians, made it one of the most strategically contested positions in Central Europe. It passed permanently to Poland only in 1945 under the postwar border reorganizations that displaced its German-speaking population entirely.
This coin belongs to NBP's long-running Nordic gold series commemorating Polish historic cities, issued annually throughout the 2000s.
Kłodzko — known as Glatz under German administration — sits in a fortified basin in Lower Silesia that changed hands repeatedly between Bohemia, Prussia, and Poland over several centuries. The town's massive hilltop fortress, begun in the 14th century and expanded by the Prussians, made it one of the most strategically contested positions in Central Europe. It passed permanently to Poland only in 1945 under the postwar border reorganizations that displaced its German-speaking population entirely.
This coin belongs to NBP's long-running Nordic gold series commemorating Polish historic cities, issued annually throughout the 2000s.