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| Issuer | National Bank of Poland (Narodowy Bank Polski) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1994 |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
| Weight | 16.50 g |
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| Reverse lettering | ZYGMUNT I STARY 1506 - 1548 |
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| Mint | (MW) Mint of Poland (Mennica Polska), Warsaw, Poland (1766-date) |
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| Additional information |
This piece belongs to Poland's early 1990s commemorative program, which used newly minted silver coins partly as a vehicle for reasserting national historical identity after decades of communist rule that had systematically suppressed dynastic iconography. Sigismund I, who reigned from 1506 to 1548, presided over what Poles call the "Golden Age" — a period of genuine cultural and political expansion during which Kraków briefly ranked among Europe's most sophisticated royal courts.
The denomination itself, 200,000 złotych, reflects the grotesque inflation Poland was still unwinding following the communist collapse; the redenomination that replaced 10,000 old złotych with one new złoty came just one year later, in 1995.