Clement XI's pontificate was consumed by the War of the Spanish Succession, in which his support for the Bourbon claimant Philip V cost him dearly — the Habsburg Emperor Charles VI retaliated by occupying Comacchio and then the entire Papal States in 1709. By 1716, the year of this scudo, the papacy was simultaneously managing the financial fallout of that occupation and the opening salvos of the Quietist controversy. Gold coinage from this pontificate is genuinely scarce in circulation grades; the Papal States' gold output was modest by design, with scudi d'oro functioning primarily as presentation and diplomatic currency rather than everyday commerce.
Clement XI's pontificate was consumed by the War of the Spanish Succession, in which his support for the Bourbon claimant Philip V cost him dearly — the Habsburg Emperor Charles VI retaliated by occupying Comacchio and then the entire Papal States in 1709. By 1716, the year of this scudo, the papacy was simultaneously managing the financial fallout of that occupation and the opening salvos of the Quietist controversy. Gold coinage from this pontificate is genuinely scarce in circulation grades; the Papal States' gold output was modest by design, with scudi d'oro functioning primarily as presentation and diplomatic currency rather than everyday commerce.