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Sunday, March 29, 2009

Poland Groszy

The polish currency is zloty, and a grosz is the 100th part of a zloty. The zloty underwent redenomination following high inflation around  1990. Due to the redenomination, 10,000 zloty became 1 zloty and 100 zloty became 1grosz. This happened in January 1995.

1 grosz, 2004
poland 1 grosz 2004
Metal:Brass
Reverse: denomination, drooping oak leaf over value
Obverse: "Rzeczpopolita Polska", meaning republic of Poland, date and Polish coat of arms

2 grosze, 1998
poland 2 grosze 1998
Metal:Brass
Reverse: denomination, two drooping oak leaves
Obverse: "Rzeczpopolita Polska", meaning republic of Poland, date and Polish coat of arms

10 groszy, 1999
poland 10 groszy 1999
Metal: copper-nickel
Diameter: 16mm
Reverse: denomination within a wreath
Obverse: "Rzeczpopolita Polska", meaning republic of Poland, date and Polish coat of arms


20 groszy,1992
poland 20 groszy 1992
Metal: Copper-nickel
Diameter: 18.5mm
Reverse: denomination within an artistic design
Obverse: "Rzeczpopolita Polska", meaning republic of Poland, date and Polish coat of arms

The coat of arms of Poland is a White Eagle. The coat of arms first appeared about seven hundred years ago, and its appearance is not changed much since then. It is one of the oldest coat of arms and there are very few countries that have been able to keep their respective coat of arms for this long a period of time in a pretty much pristine state. The stylized appearance of  the coat of arms makes it a tad difficult to establish which bird is shown. The crowned white eagle is the most probabilistic choice of what bird this could be, and at the same time, the possibility of it being a chicken, pigeon or peacock has also been postulated.

The design of the coat of arms consists of a crowned white eagle, having golden claws, beak and a golden crown on its head. The appearance of the bird is stylized and the background is a red shield.

In Poland, the eagle appeared as a coat of arms for the first time on seals of several Dukes of the Piast dynasty (they were portrayed both standing and on horseback) in the years 1222-1236. It was their personal and family coat of arms and at the same time the emblem of their dukedoms. The eagle was selected as their coat of arms for its symbolic values. As the king of all birds it was a primeval symbol of power, victory, force and kingship. For the same reason, many monarchs in other countries, used the eagle in their coats of arms. The eagle of the Piast princes had different colors than the others. From the very beginning it was the White Eagle in the red shield (on "gules", according to heraldic terminology). 

In the beginning, the eagle of Piasts had no crown. It was as late as when trends to unify Polish lands and to restore the Kingdom of Poland (disrupted as early as in the second half of the 11th century) emerged - when the Eagle's head was crowned. It took place in 1290, when the Duke of Great Poland and Kraków, Przemysl II put forward a plan to unite Poland, together with his own claim to the royal crown. When Przemysl II was crowned as the King of Poland in 1295, he introduced the White Eagle in a crown on the back side of his royal seal of majesty, as the Coat of Arms of the whole Kingdom of Poland. All Polish kings that followed accepted it in that character. Beginning from the times of Wladyslaw Jagiello, that is from the end of 14th century, the Polish White Eagle was accompanied by "Pogon" (a knight on a horse with the raised sword in his hand), the coat of arms of Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It was a sign of the union of the two States under the rule of the same King. 

The shape of the White Eagle changed following consecutive artistic styles in different times. The gothic Eagle of the Piasts and the Jagellons was followed in 16th century by a Renaissance one, then by a decorative baroque one, and finally by a harmonious and yet deprived of power of expression, classicistic 18th century one. At the beginning of 19th century the design of the Polish military eagle worn on soldiers’ caps developed. As the coat of arms of the Kingdom of Poland, the White Eagle was at the same time the personal Coat of Arms of each King. Beginning from 16th century, the connection between the Eagle and the King was expressed by his monogram on the Eagle's breast, later by his family coat of arms. Despite the changing artistic form of the White Eagle, its ideological message was always the same. It was a symbol of the sovereign and independent Polish State, and of the King who personified all his subjects. As a symbol of the State and the King, it was present on royal seals and documents, on coins, army banners, on royal tombstones and residences, on State office buildings and more important churches; it was used during State and Court ceremonies. In 1705 King August II established the highest Polish decoration, the Order of the White Eagle, existing untill now. 

In 1795, in the consequence of the partition of Poland by Russia, Prussia and Austria, and in the consequence of the breakdown of the State, the White Eagle lost its significance as the coat of arms an was replaced by the emblems of the foreign monarchies. It reappeared however, in every national uprising and in other attempts to restore independence (in 1831, 1846, 1848 and 1863/64). It became at that time the main visual symbol of the struggle for national independence. The left-oriented liberation movement took for their emblem the "democratic" White Eagle without the crown. In 1918, when Poland regained freedom, the crowned White Eagle became once again the Coat of Arms of the Republic of Poland. Before the 2nd world war it had two officially accepted forms - the one from 1919 and the other from 1927 (the latter designed by Professor Zygmunt Kamiñski). Apart from the official designs, several stylistic forms of the White Eagle were in use at that time. 

After the defeat in 1939 and during the German and Soviet occupation of the country the White Eagle, as Poland's coat of arms, was strictly forbidden. Once again it became the symbol of fight for free Poland. It was used by the underground army at home and by the regular Polish army abroad. The left-oriented armed forces, however, as well as the Polish army created in the Soviet Union, adopted the White Eagle without the crown. And such became the official Coat of Arms of Poland after 1945. Removing the crown from above the Eagle's head meant a change of the State's political system, from now on based on the principle of "people's democracy." That form of the White Eagle, though officially used till the end of 1989, was not commonly accepted by the Polish nation, so much attached to their previous, centuries-old national emblem. And thus, when in consequence of the events of the 1980s, the political system in Poland was changed, it was possible again to restore the crowned White Eagle. On the 29th of December 1989, the Polish Sejm (Parliament) decided to bring back the White Eagle's crown. In 1990 its official design was defined, closely relating to that of 1927. In 1993 traditional emblems of the Polish Army were restored, among which was the Crowned White Eagle. 

In 1995, the 700th anniversary of the White Eagle's coronation as the Coat of Arms of the Polish State was celebrated.

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