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1 Quattrino -

Issuer Republic of Florence (Italian States)
Year 1374
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Reference(s) MIR FI#88
Obverse description The Florentine lily (giglio), the heraldic emblem of the Republic of Florence, depicted facing, with its characteristic three upward petals and two lateral scrolled volutes at the base, rendered in a bold, stylised medieval manner typical of hammered billon coinage. A border of pellets encircles the central device within the field. The flan is irregular, as is characteristic of hand-struck medieval issues.
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Edge Plain
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Additional information

Florence's quattrino coinage of the 1370s circulated during a period of acute municipal stress — the city was moving toward the Ciompi revolt of 1378, when wool-carders and disenfranchised laborers briefly seized control of the government in one of the earliest documented workers' uprisings in European history. Billon's debased silver content was itself a political calculation, stretching the commune's metal reserves during years of factional expenditure and mercenary contracts.

MIR FI#88 places this among the issues attributed to the third quarter of the fourteenth century under the priorate system, where monetary decisions passed through rotating magistrates rather than a single authority.

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