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Bracteate of Bolesław the Pious

Popularization note

From the end of the 1230s, the fourth generation of dukes came to power in Poland, divided into districts. In Greater Poland it was represented by the brothers Przemysł I (born around 1220-1221) and Bolesław the Pious (born around 1224-1227). At that time, the idea of the senior prince ruling over Lesser Poland and endowed with a set of reserved powers and privileges was a relict. In the last decades of the 12th century, the exclusive right to issue money ascribed to him became the domain of regional rulers, with time leading to the disintegration of Poland into many monetary provinces.

Two issues of denars are connected to the period of co-rulership in Wielkopolska by princes Przemysł I and Bolesław. On the obverse of the first one, we can see a figure of a kneeling knight with a sword, and on the reverse a head with carefully combed long hair. The subject of the obverse of the next denarius is the image of a prince in majesty and the bust of St Wacław on the reverse. Simultaneously with the bilateral denars minted with the obverse and reverse stamp, single-sided denars were issued in 13th-century Poland, made on very thin sheet metal (Latin bractea), hence called brakteates. The progressive devaluation of money at that time led to a decrease in the weight of minted coins, which in the middle of the 13th century usually did not exceed 0.2 grams. However, brakteates were not as small a monetary unit as it might seem, for in the middle of the 13th century two such coins were sufficient to cover the cost of a day's food.

An example of this type of issue is the brakteat of Bolesław the Pious, produced after 1257, in the period of his independent rule. It shows the bust of a knight in a helmet facing right, surrounded by a wall with a gate and two towers, with a banner between them. It is interesting that next to the variant presented here without inscriptions, there are copies with horizontally composed letters – BOL, probably referring to the person of the prince.

The depiction of the prince in armour with a pennant on the coin against the background of the wall served to manifest his sovereign territorial power, emphasised his knightly qualities and defensive abilities. It also indicated the importance of the castle from which he ruled the country.

Tomasz Markiewicz

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown (mint), Bolesław the Pious, Duke of Greater Poland (after 1221-1279) (issuer)

Dimensions

cały obiekt:

Object type

numismatic

Technique

stamp minting

Material

silver

Creation time / dating

1257 — 1279

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Greater Poland, a historical land (Poland)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

N/2834/ML

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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