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1 Quattrino - Leopoldo II

Issuer Tuscany, Grand Duchy of
Year 1842-1857
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Reference(s) C#62a, MIR#465
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Obverse lettering LEOP۰II۰A۰D۰A۰G-D۰DI TOSC۰
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Mintage 1842 - - 250,000
1843 - - 454,500
1844 - - 546,950
1845 - - 414,000
1846 - - 522,350
1847 - - 540,000
1848 - - 477,300
1849 - -
1850 - - 513,560
1851 - - 616,400
1852 - - 262,000
1853 - - 590,600
1854 - - 598,350
1856 - - 296,800
1857 - - 76,200
Additional information

Leopoldo II ruled Tuscany as a genuinely moderate Habsburg grand duke — mild enough that Tuscans called him "Canapone," roughly "hemp head," an affectionate jab at his unhurried manner. That goodwill evaporated after 1849, when Austrian troops helped restore him following the revolutionary expulsions, and he spent his remaining years increasingly dependent on Vienna. The quattrino, the lowest copper denomination in circulation, was the coin most Florentines actually handled daily for small market transactions.

He was ultimately deposed in 1859 without a shot fired, his subjects simply declining to defend him.

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