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2 1/2 Baiocchi - Pius VI

Issuer Fermo (Papal States)
Year 1796-1797
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Value 21/2 Baiocchi (1⁄40)
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Obverse description Inscription in three lines across the field reading BAIOCCHI / DVE E MEZZ / FERMO, with the date below and a row of five six-pointed stars arranged in an arc above. The entire design is enclosed within a plain inner circle surrounded by a milled outer border. The denomination is rendered in abbreviated Italian in the characteristic lettering style of late 18th-century Papal provincial coinage.
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Obverse lettering BAIOCCHI DVE E MEZZO FERMO 1796
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Fermo's copper coinage of 1796–97 exists entirely because of Napoleon. As French forces swept through the Papal States in the spring of 1796, the disruption to Rome's central mint operations forced peripheral papal cities to strike emergency issues under local authority. Fermo, an Adriatic coastal town with its own mint rights, produced this denomination in three documented die varieties — reflected in the KM#2.1 through 2.3 distinctions — across a production window that closed when French occupation rendered further papal civic coinage moot.

The Papal States ceded Fermo to France in the Treaty of Tolentino, February 1797.

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