The National Printing House and Mint (INCM), is a public limited company of anonymous shareholders administratively subordinated by the Ministry of Finance that acts as the national mint and state publisher of Portugal. It designs and produces a variety of security and information products and services for the Portuguese government, most notable of which are the government gazette and coinage. In addition to currency and publication of the government gazette, the INCM produces passports; identity documents, postage stamps, and several types of certificates. It is located in Lisbon in the Santo António freguesia.
History
The Casa da Moeda was established at least in the late 13th century. It produced legal tender coins and banknotes. It also produced medals and security prints (i.e., passports, subway tokens, postage stamps) that are used and issued by government-run service providers. In 1972 it was merged with the Imprensa Nacional (National Press) into Imprensa Nacional–Casa da Moeda through the Law Decree nr. 225/72 of July 4. Imprensa Nacional–Casa da Moeda (INCM) has the mission of publishing the Official Journal (Diário da República),[1]