Italian private banks of issue operated under increasingly tight constraints after unification, and the Banca Popolare di Milano — founded in 1865 on cooperative principles rather than as a commercial or state institution — occupied an unusual legal position among them. Its authority to issue small-denomination fiduciary notes like this 50 centesimi piece was short-lived; the progressive consolidation of note-issuing rights through the 1870s and ultimately the 1893 creation of the Banca d'Italia effectively ended such privileges for cooperative institutions.
Small fractional notes of this period are disproportionately rare — low face value meant heavy handling, and few were preserved intentionally.
Italian private banks of issue operated under increasingly tight constraints after unification, and the Banca Popolare di Milano — founded in 1865 on cooperative principles rather than as a commercial or state institution — occupied an unusual legal position among them. Its authority to issue small-denomination fiduciary notes like this 50 centesimi piece was short-lived; the progressive consolidation of note-issuing rights through the 1870s and ultimately the 1893 creation of the Banca d'Italia effectively ended such privileges for cooperative institutions.
Small fractional notes of this period are disproportionately rare — low face value meant heavy handling, and few were preserved intentionally.