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5 zlotys

Popularization note

In the inter-war period, many types of banknotes appeared in circulation. Initially, it was mainly due to the economic situation of the country, which was being rebuilt after the period of captivity. The need to fight to maintain independence and the difficult economic situation often forced successive governments to resort to temporary solutions, also in state finances. Władysław Grabski’s reform also brought stability to the monetary policy. Another difficult period faced by the Polish state was the Great Economic Crisis initiated on so-called Black Thursday, 24 October 1929. In a sense, the 5-zloty denomination can be considered the first Polish banknote during the Great Depression, as the decision to issue it was taken on 2 January 1930. However, it was not circulated until 15 September 1934, i.e., after the wave of the crisis had passed.

The five-zloty banknote also marked the start of a new custom of Bank Polski to issue individual banknotes, which were created according to different designs that were neither stylistically nor graphically related. The only relatively constant element was a wide, unprinted margin containing a watermark. It usually depicted the ruler of Poland, but even here it was not fully consistent: the 2-zloty banknote of 1936 had no watermark, whereas on the 20 and 50-zloty banknotes of the same year the watermark depicted Emilia Plater and General Jan Henryk Dąbrowski.

In the case of the 5-zloty banknote, its design was created by Ryszard Kleczewski, a designer at the Polish Security Printing Works, and the printing was commissioned to the printing works of the Hungarian National Bank (Magyar Nemzeti Bank). The printing plate was engraved there by an Austrian graphic artist and engraver Franke Ruppert. The main motif on the obverse was an image modelled on the painting Kasztelanka by Jan Matejko.

It is interesting to note that the height and typeface of the letters denoting the series of issue differ between the 1930 five-zloty banknotes. Most have letters 3 mm high, while some series have letters 3.38 mm high. This piece belongs to the CP series, which means that the series letters are 3 mm high.

Leszek Poniewozik

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

Kleczewski, Ryszard (1888-1966) (author), Ruppert, Franke (1888-1971) (album engraving) (engraver), National Bank of Hungary (Budapest; 1924-) (label)

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 145 mm, width: 77 mm

Object type

paper money

Technique

print

Material

paper

Creation time / dating

1930

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Budapest (Hungary)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

N/Bn/846/ML

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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