COINS OF THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE
Coins of Imperial Russia (1721-1917) are the most common and most desirable finds.
👑 Imperial monograms (vensels)
The obverse of copper coins often features the ruler's monogram (cypher).
- **Peter I (П):** Interlaced Latin P's.
- **Catherine II (Е II):** An ornate letter E with the numeral II. "Katya's five-kopeck pieces" are huge copper coins (50 g).
- **Paul I (П I):** A plain, austere letter P.
- **Alexander I, II, III (А):** The letter A with the corresponding numeral.
- **Nicholas II (Н II):** The last emperor, monogram N II.
🏭 Mints (letters on the coin)
- **Е.М.** — Yekaterinburg Mint (the largest output, copper coins).
- **С.П.М.** / **С.П.Б.** — St. Petersburg Mint.
- **К.М.** — Suzun (Kolyvan) Mint (Siberian copper with traces of gold/silver, "Siberian" coinage).
- **М.М.** — Moscow Mint.
- **В.М.** — Warsaw Mint.
💰 Monetary reforms
- **Kankrin's reform (1839-1843):** Introduction of the silver monometallic standard. Coins began bearing the inscription "N kopecks in silver" (even though the coin itself was copper, its value was pegged to silver).
- **Witte's reform (1897):** The gold standard. Introduction of gold 5, 7.5, 10, and 15 ruble coins.