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fwo_551100 - ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS VII (Barnaba Chiaramonti) Double Giulio 1816 Rome

ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS VII (Barnaba Chiaramonti) Double Giulio 1816 Rome VF
100.00 €(Approx. 107.00$ | 86.00£)
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Type : Double Giulio
Date: 1816
Mint name / Town : Roma
Quantity minted : -
Metal : silver
Diameter : 25,13 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 5,10 g.
Edge : lisse
Coments on the condition:
monnaie nettoyée, rayures au revers
Catalogue references :
Predigree :
Exemplaire de la Collection du Cardinal Dubois mise en vente en 1934 par Clément Platt sous le numéro 789, puis collection Alfredo Meneghin

Obverse


Obverse legend : PIVS VII. - P·M·A·XVII.
Obverse description : armes surmontées des clefs et de la tiare.
Obverse translation : (Pie VII Grand Pontife an XVII).

Reverse


Reverse legend : AVXILIVM DE SANCTO // 1816.
Reverse description : représentation de l’Église.

Historical background


ITALY - PAPAL STATES - PIUS VII (Barnaba Chiaramonti)

(14/03/1800-20/08/1823)

Pius VII (08/14/1740-08/20/1823) succeeded Pius VI after a long vacancy on the papal throne. Pius VI had died in captivity in Valencia on August 29, 1799 and the republic had been proclaimed in Rome on February 15, 1798. It lasted until September 29, 1799. Rome was then successively occupied by the Neapolitans and the Austrians until July 3. 1800. Pius VII had been elected on March 14. The first part of his pontificate was occupied by his relations with the French Republic, then with Napoleon I. He signed the concordat with Bonaparte in 1801 and crowned him at Notre-Dame on December 2, 1804. Rome was occupied in 1808 and the Papal States confiscated the following year, while the pope was "invited" to Fontainebleau. He remained there until 1814. Freed by the fall of the emperor, he returned to Rome and spent the last eight years of his pontificate restoring his temporal and spiritual authority. He welcomed Napoleon's family to Rome. He died in 1823.

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