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1/4 Scudo - Octavio Farnese

Issuer Duchy of Parma and Piacenza (Italian States)
Year 1556-1586
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Orientation Medal alignment ↑↑
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Reverse description The reverse displays the elaborate quartered coat of arms of the Farnese dynasty, surmounted by a ducal crown. The shield is divided into multiple quarters bearing fleurs-de-lis and the Farnese lilies, with the central escutcheon featuring the papal keys and tiara referencing the family's pontifical heritage. Flanking the shield are decorative scrollwork supporters, and a diagonal baton or lance crosses behind the escutcheon. The circumferential legend PLAC * ROMOLO, alluding to Piacenza as a colony of the Romans, runs around the outer beaded border. The overall composition is characteristic of high Renaissance Italian civic heraldic coinage.
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Mint Piacenza Mint
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Additional information

Ottavio Farnese inherited the Duchy of Parma under deeply hostile circumstances — his father Pier Luigi was assassinated in 1547, and Charles V seized Piacenza immediately after, leaving Ottavio to claw back legitimacy through decades of diplomatic maneuvering between the Habsburgs and the French crown. His coinage reflects that prolonged struggle for recognition; the quarter scudo series was issued across a reign of nearly thirty years, during which the mint at Parma functioned as much as a political instrument as a monetary one.

Surviving examples vary considerably in die quality across the long production window, an expected consequence of a small ducal mint stretched over three decades.

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