This piece belongs to Poland's long-running series honoring the Jagiellonian kings, issued by Mennica Polska under authority of the Narodowy Bank Polski. Sigismund I "the Old" ruled from 1506 to 1548, a reign that coincided almost precisely with the Polish Renaissance at its peak — he brought Italian architects to Kraków, rebuilt the Wawel Royal Castle in Renaissance style, and his court became one of the most culturally sophisticated in northern Europe.
His monetary significance is direct: Sigismund I enacted the monetary reform of 1526, unifying the coinage of the Polish Crown and Grand Duchy of Lithuania under a single standard — the grosz system that anchored Polish commerce for generations.
This piece belongs to Poland's long-running series honoring the Jagiellonian kings, issued by Mennica Polska under authority of the Narodowy Bank Polski. Sigismund I "the Old" ruled from 1506 to 1548, a reign that coincided almost precisely with the Polish Renaissance at its peak — he brought Italian architects to Kraków, rebuilt the Wawel Royal Castle in Renaissance style, and his court became one of the most culturally sophisticated in northern Europe.
His monetary significance is direct: Sigismund I enacted the monetary reform of 1526, unifying the coinage of the Polish Crown and Grand Duchy of Lithuania under a single standard — the grosz system that anchored Polish commerce for generations.