A beautiful, original medal from Poland's most famous medal series - the royal suite. With the cherished reign of Boleslaw the Brave, whose 1000th anniversary of his coronation is being celebrated all over Poland this year.
Mint art, in patina, with mirror. Appreciated with a MS type note in NGC grading.
Signed I. P. H. F. (Jan Filip Holzhäuser).
The Royal Suite is the most coveted and most difficult to collect medal series in Polish numismatics. Original medals from this series appear in the trade very rarely, some of them even once every few or a dozen years.
The initiator of the royal series was King Stanislaw August Poniatowski. In 1791, he commissioned his court medalist, the famous Jan Filip Holzhaeusser, to create a post of Polish kings on medals. They were to depict a portrait of the king on the obverse, whose prototypes were Bacciarelli's paintings hanging in the Royal Castle, and on the reverses a concise description of the achievements of the respective ruler, for which Poniatowski himself was to be responsible.
And so, in 1791, the first of 11 pairs of stamps for which Holzhaeusser was responsible were created. After his death a year later, Jan Jakub Reichel continued the work, preparing medals from Sigismund I the Old. In total, between 1791 and 1798, stamps were created for 23 medals, which today constitute the set of the Suite.
Medals in the 18th century were minted in gold (according to M. Męclewska, one piece each for Stanislaw Augustus), silver and, according to some historical sources, bronze. Among the latter, we also find later prints from the original stamps, which, together with numerous 19th-century casts, copies or medallions along the lines of the series (including Minter's), testify to the great interest in the suite and the problems posed by its collection. Both at the time of the Partitions and today, more than 200 years later.