After Viennese Congress
In 1815, on the Viennese Congress, the new partation of Poland took place and since January 1816 the Mint started the coinage under the stamp and for the account of Congress Kingdom of Poland, i.e. for the territories annexed by the Russians. Since 1824 the Mint had the monopoly for the production of state seals and stamps. In 1831, during the November uprising, the Mint coined the pieces with the national emblems (Eagle and Lithuania). At that time it became for a short period the arms factory. After the November uprising downfall the Mint produced the bilingual coins and since 1841 the Russian ones only. On the 1st january, 1868 The Mint of Warsaw was closed down, the mint machinery, archives and numismatic collections were taken away to Petersburg. In 1905 the Mint's building at Bielanska Street was pulled down by the tsar's authorities. After the revival of independent Poland, it was necessary to reconstract own minting. On the 14th April, 1924 the Mint of Warsaw was reopened at Markowska Street in the buildings of the tsar's spirit monopoly.




