Catalog
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| Issuer | March of Montferrat (Montferrat, Italian States) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1530-1533 |
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| Currency | Fiorino |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Reverse description | A bold cross pattée with fleur-de-lis terminals occupies the central field, the arms of the cross terminating in stylised lily finials, all contained within a plain inner circle formed by a beaded border. Small crescent-like ornaments are visible in each of the four angles between the arms of the cross. The surrounding legend, divided by the cross arms, carries the well-known Christological acclamation in Latin, rendered in Gothic lettering characteristic of the period. |
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| Reverse lettering | XPS VINCIT XPS REGNAT XPS IMPERAT |
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| Additional information |
John George Palaeologus ruled Montferrat as a direct descendant of the Byzantine imperial line — the Palaeologi had held the march since 1305, when Theodoros I inherited it through his mother, a daughter of Guglielmo VII. By John George's reign, the dynasty was a dynastic relic governing a small north Italian territory entirely at the mercy of the French and Habsburg powers maneuvering through the Italian Wars. He died in 1533 without legitimate heirs, ending the Palaeologan line in the West entirely. The march passed by imperial grant to Federico II Gonzaga of Mantua the same year.