Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Antykwariat Numizmatyczny - Michał Niemczyk
Context
Years: 1766–1794
Country: Poland Country flag
Currency:
(1573—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 55,844,000
Material
Diameter: 26 mm
Weight: 11.69 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard182
Numista: #29559

Obverse

Description:
Right-facing bust
Inscription:
STANISLAUS AUG·D.G. REX POL·M·D·L·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned coat of arms encircled by text.
Inscription:
GROSSUS POLON:TRIPLEX·1766.

G
Script: Latin

Edge

Pattern

Mints

NameMark
Mint of Poland

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1766G12,400,000
1767G
1768G
1769G989,000
1770G1,986,000
1771G504,000
1772AP
1772G570,000
1773AP733,000
1774AP1,039,000
1775EB1,099,000
1776EB1,592,000
1777EB865,000
1778EB695,000
1779EB507,000
1780EB307,000
1781EB501,000
1782EB213,000
1783EB652,000
1784EB447,000
1785EB290,000
1786EB233,000
1787EB2,797,000
1788EB5,029,000
1789EB3,317,000
1790EB5,242,000
1791EB3,906,000
1792MV
1792EB5,223,000
1793MV2,618,000
1794MV2,090,000

Historical background

The monetary system of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1766 was in a state of profound crisis, characterized by rampant debasement and economic instability. For decades, the state's unique political system, the liberum veto, allowed foreign powers and domestic magnates to block necessary reforms, including fiscal and monetary policy. This led to the proliferation of numerous private mints, often operated by powerful nobles, which flooded the Commonwealth with low-quality coinage containing far less precious metal than their face value declared. This practice, alongside a flood of counterfeit coins, destroyed public trust in the currency, crippled commerce, and drained full-value specie out of the country.

In response, King Stanisław August Poniatowski, newly elected and aiming for modernization, initiated a comprehensive monetary reform in 1766. The reform, prepared with the assistance of foreign experts, sought to centralize minting under state control and introduce a new, stable currency based on the Cologne mark of fine silver. The cornerstone was a new decimal system, introducing the złoty polski (Polish złoty), which was divided into 30 groszy, replacing the old system of złotys as accounting units. New copper shillings (szeląg) and silver coins (grosz, tymf, ducat) were minted in Warsaw, bearing the king's portrait and national symbols to reinforce state authority.

Despite its sound theoretical basis, the 1766 reform faced immediate and severe challenges. The Commonwealth's treasury was empty, lacking the necessary bullion reserves to fully back the new currency and conduct a complete recoinage. More critically, the political will to suppress the powerful magnates' private mints was insufficient, and the entrenched economic disorder proved difficult to reverse. Consequently, while the reform established the framework for a modern monetary system and introduced coins that would become iconic, it failed to fully stabilize the currency or stop the financial decay, a symptom of the deeper political paralysis that would soon lead to the partitions of Poland.

Series: 1766 Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth circulation coins

½ Groschen obverse
½ Groschen reverse
½ Groschen
1766-1768
3 Groschens obverse
3 Groschens reverse
3 Groschens
1766-1794
Silver Groschen obverse
Silver Groschen reverse
Silver Groschen
1766-1782
2 Groschens obverse
2 Groschens reverse
2 Groschens
1766-1786
🌟 Uncommon