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Silver polushka (poludenga) of Ivan the Terrible, minted in Veliky Novgorod in 1535–1584. Weight 0.15 g.
A polushka (Russian: полушка, "half [of a denga]") was a Russian coin with value equal to 1⁄4 kopeck (100 kopecks = 1 rouble).
Production of polushkas as minted coins began in 1700 under Peter the Great, though more primitive hammered wire money polushkas[1] had been produced for over 150 years before that. Mintage continued, off and on, until 1916, just before the Romanov dynasty was overthrown in 1917.
While coins minted in the 18th century invariably showed the denomination as polushka, during parts of the 19th and early 20th centuries the denomination was shown as simply 1⁄4 kopeck.
Dates when Minted

Obverse of a rare 1700 polushka. The legend around the eagle reads "ЦРЬ ПЕТР АЛЕКСЕЕВИЧ" or Tsar Petr Alekseevich (Peter the Great)
- Peter the Great (1700–1716, 1718–1722)
- Anna of Russia (1730–1731, 1734–1740)Ivan VI of Russia (1741)Reverse of a 1700 polushka. The word polushka is on two lines and the old Cyrillic date is below "҂АΨ" The legend reads "ВСЕЯ РОСИИ САМОДЕРЖЕЦ" or ...autocrat of all Russia. Minted at the Naberezhny mint in Moscow.
- Elizabeth Petrovna (1743–1751, 1754, 1757–1759)
- Catherine II of Russia (1766–1773, 1775, 1783–1796)
- Paul I of Russia (1797–1800)
- Alexander I of Russia (1803–1805, 1807–1808,1810)
- Nicholas I of Russia (1839–1846, 1849–1855)
- Alexander II of Russia (1855–1881)
- Alexander III of Russia (1881–1894)
- Nicholas II of Russia (1894–1900, 1909–1910, 1915–1916)

1795 Polushka minted under Catherine II (Catherine the Great)
See also
References
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