Paul V — born Camillo Borghese — was elected in May 1605 after the 27-day pontificate of Leo XI, and his reign would prove among the most legally combative of the early seventeenth century. Within a year of this coin's striking, he placed the entire Republic of Venice under interdict following a dispute over clerical jurisdiction and Venetian laws limiting Church property acquisition. The confrontation lasted nearly a year and drew in both Spain and France as mediators before a negotiated settlement was reached in 1607.
The Borghese papacy was also a period of significant Roman building expenditure — work on St. Peter's Basilica resumed under his direct patronage — which placed persistent pressure on papal finances and informed the minting priorities of his early years.
Paul V — born Camillo Borghese — was elected in May 1605 after the 27-day pontificate of Leo XI, and his reign would prove among the most legally combative of the early seventeenth century. Within a year of this coin's striking, he placed the entire Republic of Venice under interdict following a dispute over clerical jurisdiction and Venetian laws limiting Church property acquisition. The confrontation lasted nearly a year and drew in both Spain and France as mediators before a negotiated settlement was reached in 1607.
The Borghese papacy was also a period of significant Roman building expenditure — work on St. Peter's Basilica resumed under his direct patronage — which placed persistent pressure on papal finances and informed the minting priorities of his early years.