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Home ▸ Catalog ▸ |Medieval & Modern Coins| ▸ |Italy||View Options:  |  |  |   

Coins of Italy
Kingdom of Sicily, Manfred von Hohenstaufen, 1258 - 1266

|Sicily|, |Kingdom| |of| |Sicily,| |Manfred| |von| |Hohenstaufen,| |1258| |-| |1266||denaro|
The reading of the legends on this rare type is not certain. Biaggi did not have an adequate specimen and used a line drawing in place of the usual photograph. MEC notes there are no know specimens with clear legends.
ME95046. Billon denaro, Spahr 199, MEC Italy III 609A, MIR Sicily 138, Biaggi 1277 (R2), F, green patina, typical small squared flan, uneven strike, weight 0.556 g, maximum diameter 15.6 mm, Messina mint, 1258 - 1266; obverse + MAYNFRID, S entwined around cross; reverse + SICILIE REX, Ω over • R •; $20.00 SALE PRICE $18.00
 


Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 2 Piemonte e Sardegna tranne le sedi dei Savoia già sul volume 1

|Medieval| |&| |Modern| |Books|, |Corpus| |Nummorum| |Italicorum| |Vol.| |2| |Piemonte| |e| |Sardegna| |tranne| |le| |sedi| |dei| |Savoia| |già| |sul| |volume| |1|
A Corpus of Italian Coins Vol. 2 Piedmont and Sardinia except for the Savoia headquarters already on volume 1, 1911. The Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, also known as CNI, was written by Vittorio Emanuele III of Savoy assisted by the most experienced numismatists of the time. First attempt of a general catalog of medieval and modern coins minted in Italy or by Italians in other countries. It is still fundamental today for the study and classification of the emissions of the different Italian Mints from the Middle Ages . The work, initially scheduled in 10-12 volumes, remained unfinished due to the outbreak of the Second World War.
BK17496. Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 2 Piemonte e Sardegna tranne le sedi dei Savoia già sul volume 1, reprint of the 1911 edition, in Italian, 48 plates, 506 pages, paperback, international shipping at the actual cost of postage; $15.00 SALE PRICE $13.50
 


Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 3 Liguria e Corsica

|Medieval| |&| |Modern| |Books|, |Corpus| |Nummorum| |Italicorum| |Vol.| |3| |Liguria| |e| |Corsica|
A Corpus of Italian Coins Vol. 3 Liguria and Corsica, 1912. The Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, also known as CNI, was written by Vittorio Emanuele III of Savoy assisted by the most experienced numismatists of the time. First attempt of a general catalog of medieval and modern coins minted in Italy or by Italians in other countries. It is still fundamental today for the study and classification of the emissions of the different Italian Mints from the Middle Ages. The work, initially scheduled in 10-12 volumes, remained unfinished due to the outbreak of the Second World War.
BK17505. Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 3 Liguria e Corsica, reprint of the 1912 edition, in Italian, 29 plates, 620 pages, paperback, international shipping at the actual cost of postage; $15.00 SALE PRICE $13.50
 


Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 4 Lombardia (tranne Milano)

|Medieval| |&| |Modern| |Books|, |Corpus| |Nummorum| |Italicorum| |Vol.| |4| |Lombardia| |(tranne| |Milano)|
A Corpus of Italian Coins Vol. 4 Lombardia (except Milan), 1913. The Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, also known as CNI, was written by Vittorio Emanuele III of Savoy assisted by the most experienced numismatists of the time. First attempt of a general catalog of medieval and modern coins minted in Italy or by Italians in other countries. It is still fundamental today for the study and classification of the emissions of the different Italian Mints from the Middle Ages. The work, initially scheduled in 10-12 volumes, remained unfinished due to the outbreak of the Second World War.
BK17507. Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 4 Lombardia (tranne Milano), reprint of the 1913 edition, in Italian, 48 plates, 588 pages, paperback, international shipping at the actual cost of postage; $15.00 SALE PRICE $13.50
 


Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 5 Lombardia (Milano)

|Medieval| |&| |Modern| |Books|, |Corpus| |Nummorum| |Italicorum| |Vol.| |5| |Lombardia| |(Milano)|
A Corpus of Italian Coins Vol. Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 5 Lombardia (Milan), 1914. The Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, also known as CNI, was written by Vittorio Emanuele III of Savoy assisted by the most experienced numismatists of the time. First attempt of a general catalog of medieval and modern coins minted in Italy or by Italians in other countries. It is still fundamental today for the study and classification of the emissions of the different Italian Mints from the Middle Ages. The work, initially scheduled in 10-12 volumes, remained unfinished due to the outbreak of the Second World War.
BK17508. Corpus Nummorum Italicorum Vol. 5 Lombardia (Milano), reprint of the 1914 edition, in Italian, 33 plates, 474 pages, paperback, international shipping at the actual cost of postage; $10.00 SALE PRICE $9.00
 


Kingdom of Naples, Campobasso, Nicolas II of Montforte, 1459 -1463

|Italy|, |Kingdom| |of| |Naples,| |Campobasso,| |Nicolas| |II| |of| |Montforte,| |1459| |-1463||tornese|
Campobasso is the capital of the Molise region and of the province of Campobassoa in southern Italy; located in the high basin of the Biferno river, surrounded by the Sannio and Matese mountains. The main tourist attraction is the Castello Monforte, built by Nicolas II over Lombard or Norman ruins. The castle has Guelph merlons and stands on a commanding point, where traces of ancient settlements (including Samnite walls) have been found. The castle was rebuilt after the earthquakes in 1456 and 1805.
ME65242. Billon tornese, MEC Italy III 938 var. (no lis flanking châtel), MIR Napoli -CNI XVIII p. 234, 3, Biaggi 538 (R5) var. (same) (MIR, Biaggi attributed to Nicholas I), F, weight 1.045 g, maximum diameter 18.0 mm, die axis 315o, Campobasso mint, 1459 - 1463; obverse *+* CAmPIbASSI, châtel tournois, single pellet at center, flanked on each side by lis; reverse *+* CAmPIbASSI, cross pattée; rare; SOLD


Papal States, Pius IX, 1846 - 1878

|Papal| |States|, |Papal| |States,| |Pius| |IX,| |1846| |-| |1878||20| |baiocchi|
Pius IX was Pope from 1846 to 1878, the longest verified papal reign. He was the last pope who was also a secular ruler. As monarch of the Papal States, he ruled over some 3 million people. In 1870, the Papal States were seized by force of arms by the newly founded Kingdom of Italy. Thereafter he refused to leave Vatican City, declaring himself a "prisoner of the Vatican." The matter was only resolved in international law by the Lateran Treaty agreed in 1929 between the Kingdom of Italy and the Holy See, the latter receiving financial compensation for the loss of the Papal States and Italy recognized the Vatican City State as an independent territorial sovereign entity in international law known as the Holy See. The Vatican, as before, and still today, maintains diplomatic relations with many other nations.
WO99675. Silver 20 baiocchi, Berman 3311, SCWC KM 1337, VF, toned, scratches, weight 5.369 g, maximum diameter 23.1 mm, die axis 180o, Rome mint, 1850; obverse PIVS·IX·PONT· - MAX·ANN·V·, bust left, wearing zucchetto, mozzetta, and pallium; reverse 20 / BAIOCCHI / 1850 / R (value, date, Rome mintmark) in four lines within laurel wreath; SOLD




  



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REFERENCES

Anastasi, M. Monete Bizantine di Sicilia. (NP, 2009).
Bellinger, A. & P. Grierson, eds. Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks Collection and in the Whittemore Collection. (1966 - 1999).
Berman, A. G. Papal Coins. (New York, 1991).
Bernardi, G. Monetazione del Patriarcato di Aquileia. (Triest, 1975).
Biaggi, E. Le antiche monete piemontesi. (Borgone di Susa, 1978).
Biaggi, E. Monete e Zecche medievali Italiane dal Sec. VIII al Sec. XV. (Turin, 1992).
Corpus Nummorum Italicorum. (Rome, 1910-1943).
Crippa, C. Le Monete di Milano, 1329-1892. (Milan, 1986, 1990, 1997). Cudazzo, S. Una Nuova Luce sulla Monetazione Sabauda. (Pavia, 2020).
Erslev, K. Medieval Coins in the Christian J. Thomsen Collection. (South Salem, NY, 1992).
Grierson, P. & L. Travaini. Medieval European Coinage, Volume 14: Italy III: South Italy, Sicily, Sardinia. (Cambridge, 1998).
Hahn, W. Moneta Imperii Byzantini. (Vienna, 1973-81).
Levinson, R. The early dated coins of Europe 1234-1500. (Williston, VT, 2007).
Lunardi, G. Le Monete della Repubblica di Genova. (Genoa, 1975).
Metlich, M. The Coinage of Ostrogothic Italy. (London, 2004).
Monete Italiane Regionali. (Pavia, 1996 - present).
Negrini, R. & A. Varesi. La Monetazione di Milano (dal 756 al 1802). (Milan, 1991).
Pannuti, M & V. Ricco. Le monete de Napoli. Nummorum Auctiones S.A., Lugano. (Naples, 1984).
Schlumberger, G. Numismatique de l'Orient Latin. (1878; Supplement 1882; reprinted: Graz, 1954).
Sear, D. Byzantine Coins and Their Values. (London, 1987).
Simonetti, L. Monete Italiane Medioevali e Moderne. Volume I. Casa Savoia. (Ravenna, 1967-1969).
Spahr, R. Le Monete Siciliane, dai Bizantini a Carlo I d' Angio (582 - 1282). (Graz, 1976).
Spahr, R. Le Monete Siciliane, dagli Aragonesi ai Borboni (1282 – 1836). (Basel/Graz, 1982).
Travaini, L. "Hohenstaufen and Angevin denari of Sicily and Southern Italy: their mint attributions" in NC 1993.
Wroth, W. Catalogue of the Coins of the Vandals, Ostrogoths, Lombards and of the Empires of Thessalonica, Nicaea, and Trebizond in the British Museum. (London, 1911).

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