Charles Emmanuel III issued the Doppia series during a period of calculated dynastic maneuvering — he had acquired the Kingdom of Sardinia through the Treaty of London in 1720, and spent the following decades leveraging it as a bargaining chip in the War of the Austrian Succession, which broke out in 1740. Piedmont-Sardinian coinage of this period reflects a treasury under genuine military strain, as Charles Emmanuel fought on both sides of the conflict at different junctures, switching alliance from Austria to France and back again.
The 1741–1742 dating places this piece at the height of that campaigning, specifically during operations in northern Italy against Spanish and French forces in Lombardy.
Charles Emmanuel III issued the Doppia series during a period of calculated dynastic maneuvering — he had acquired the Kingdom of Sardinia through the Treaty of London in 1720, and spent the following decades leveraging it as a bargaining chip in the War of the Austrian Succession, which broke out in 1740. Piedmont-Sardinian coinage of this period reflects a treasury under genuine military strain, as Charles Emmanuel fought on both sides of the conflict at different junctures, switching alliance from Austria to France and back again.
The 1741–1742 dating places this piece at the height of that campaigning, specifically during operations in northern Italy against Spanish and French forces in Lombardy.