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v42_1009 - ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS IX (Giovanni Maria Mastai Ferretti) Médaille AR 43, Dogme de l’Immaculée Conception 1856 Rome

ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS IX (Giovanni Maria Mastai Ferretti) Médaille AR 43, Dogme de l’Immaculée Conception 1856 Rome XF
MONNAIES 42 (2010)
Starting price : 80.00 €
Estimate : 150.00 €
Realised price : 80.00 €
Number of bids : 1
Maximum bid : 90.00 €
Type : Médaille AR 43, Dogme de l’Immaculée Conception
Date: 1856
Mint name / Town : Roma
Quantity minted : ---
Metal : silver
Diameter : 43,41 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 34,28 g.
Edge : lisse
Coments on the condition:
Des marques de manipulation et de petits chocs dans les champs. Des coups sur la tranche. La médaille a été légèrement nettoyée
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : PIVS IX. PONT./ MAXI. ANNO XI..
Obverse description : Buste de Pie IX à gauche ; en-dessous I. BIANCHI..

Reverse


Reverse description : Le pape trônant dans la basilique Saint-Pierre du Vatican ; en-dessous sur deux lignes VI. ID. DEC. AN. CHR. MDCCCLIV/ SINE LA RECONCEPTA .

Historical background


ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS IX (Giovanni Maria Mastai Ferretti)

(06/16/1846-02/7/1878)

Pius IX (1792-1878), elected after a vacancy of only fifteen days, had the longest pontificate of the 19th century. After a happy start, showing in him, if not a liberal, at least an innovator between 1846-1848, the Roman revolution threw him back into conservatism. After the February Revolution in France, unrest spread throughout Europe and even Rome. Faced with the refusal of Pius IX to declare war on Austria, the republic was proclaimed on February 9 at the instigation of Mazzini and Garibaldi. On June 1, an expeditionary force was sent to Rome to restore order. The French seized the city on July 3 and restored Pius IX. He could not prevent Victor Emmanuel II from achieving Italian unity and found himself isolated from 1861. Rome resisted for another nine years before falling into the hands of the King of Italy and becoming the capital in 1870. Pius IX saw the nine last years of his life considering himself a prisoner of Italian power.

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