

The numismatic collection of the Historical and Literary Society/Polish Library in Paris amounts to over one thousand items. The collection was compiled in most part after 1945 from donations of the Historical and Literary Society members as well as from several dozen medallions and medals that had been kept at the Adam Mickiewicz Museum and had survived the war. Old coins had been an integral part of the Polish Library collection since its inception, i.e. 1838.
The collection which totalled approximately 1,700 objects in 1939 was secured and transferred to Germany in October 1940, a few months after the Nazis entered Paris. It mainly contained donations from, among others, Count Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, Władysław Potocki, Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz, Ludwik Plater, Teodor Morawski, General Henryk Dębiński, General Karol Kniaziewicz, Henri Schmidt, Wiktor Zienkowicz, The Polish Ladies’ Charitable Society and, above all, from Senator Maciej Wodziński who had settled in Dresden following the suppression of the November Uprising. Wodziński’s remarkable collection boasted 1,108 coins and medals, including 50 gold ones and 672 silver ones. In line with Wodziński’s last will, in 1850 the entire set was transferred to the Polish Library in Paris. The collection was rather universal—in compliance with the eighteenth-century tradition, it combined coins, medals, plaquettes, perhaps also banknotes dating back to antiquity and up to the mid-nineteenth century.

The numismatic collection of the Historical and Literary Society/Polish Library in Paris amounts to over one thousand items. The collection was compiled in most part after 1945 from donations of the Historical and Literary Society members as well as from several dozen medallions and medals that had been kept at the Adam Mickiewicz Museum and had survived the war. Old coins had been an integral part of the Polish Library collection since its inception, i.e. 1838.
