The "wedding to the sea" — *zaślubiny Polski z morzem* — refers to the ceremony performed by General Józef Haller on February 10, 1920, at Puck on the Gulf of Gdańsk, when he cast a ring into the Baltic to symbolize Poland's restored access to the coast after 148 years of partition. The act was partly theater, partly geopolitics: the Polish Corridor guaranteed by the Treaty of Versailles gave the newly reconstituted republic roughly 140 kilometers of coastline, though Danzig itself remained a Free City under League of Nations oversight, a compromise that satisfied almost no one.
The amber inclusion in the silver planchet is a direct material reference to the Baltic coast's most historically traded commodity.
The "wedding to the sea" — *zaślubiny Polski z morzem* — refers to the ceremony performed by General Józef Haller on February 10, 1920, at Puck on the Gulf of Gdańsk, when he cast a ring into the Baltic to symbolize Poland's restored access to the coast after 148 years of partition. The act was partly theater, partly geopolitics: the Polish Corridor guaranteed by the Treaty of Versailles gave the newly reconstituted republic roughly 140 kilometers of coastline, though Danzig itself remained a Free City under League of Nations oversight, a compromise that satisfied almost no one.
The amber inclusion in the silver planchet is a direct material reference to the Baltic coast's most historically traded commodity.