Philip II of Spain held Milan as a fief of the Spanish Crown, and the duchy's gold coinage of this period answered directly to Madrid's monetary priorities rather than any local Milanese interest. The 3 Doppie denomination placed this piece firmly in the register of presentation and mercantile finance rather than everyday commerce — pieces of this weight moved between bankers and across the Spanish Road, not through market stalls.
CNI V#169 places it among a tightly documented run, but surviving examples in collectible condition are rarely encountered; attrition from remelting was high as Spanish fiscal demands on the duchy intensified through the 1590s.
Philip II of Spain held Milan as a fief of the Spanish Crown, and the duchy's gold coinage of this period answered directly to Madrid's monetary priorities rather than any local Milanese interest. The 3 Doppie denomination placed this piece firmly in the register of presentation and mercantile finance rather than everyday commerce — pieces of this weight moved between bankers and across the Spanish Road, not through market stalls.
CNI V#169 places it among a tightly documented run, but surviving examples in collectible condition are rarely encountered; attrition from remelting was high as Spanish fiscal demands on the duchy intensified through the 1590s.