Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Joseph Kunnappally

200 Lire (Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage) – Italy

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 30th Anniversary of the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage
Italy
Context
Year: 1999
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1946)
Currency:
(1861—2001)
Demonetization: 28 February 2002
Total mintage: 105,008,500
Material
Diameter: 24 mm
Weight: 5 g
Thickness: 1.65 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronzital
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard218
Numista: #2991
Value
Exchange value: 200 ITL
Inflation-adjusted value: 335.07 ITL

Obverse

Description:
Female head with long curls facing right. Below neck, a large dot and engraver's name.
Inscription:
REPVBBLICA ITALIANA

M.VALLUCCI
Translation:
Italian Republic

M. Vallucci
Script: Latin
Languages: Italian, Latin
Engraver: Mario Vallucci

Reverse

Description:
Carabinieri symbol (a grenade with thirteen-pointed flame) beside Donatello's "David." Anniversary dates and value above. Author's name along left rim.
Inscription:
1969-1999

L.200

R

RI

E.L.Frapiccini

CARABINIERI TUTELA PATRIMONIO ARTISTICO
Translation:
Nineteen Sixty-Nine to Nineteen Ninety-Nine

Lire 200

Rome

Italian Republic

E. L. Frapiccini

Carabinieri for the Protection of Artistic Heritage
Script: Latin
Languages: Italian, Latin

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Art> Sculpture

Mints

NameMark
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1999R105,000,000
1999R8,500Proof

Historical background

In 1999, Italy was a founding member of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and adopted the euro as its official currency on January 1st. However, this adoption was purely "virtual" or scriptural for the first three years. The lira remained the physical medium of exchange for everyday transactions, but its value was irrevocably fixed to the euro at a rate of 1,936.27 lire to the euro. During this transitional period, all financial markets, banking, and government transactions were conducted in euros, and prices were often displayed in both currencies to help the public adjust.

This period followed a strenuous decade of economic convergence for Italy, driven by the strict criteria of the Maastricht Treaty. To qualify for the euro, successive Italian governments had implemented tough austerity measures in the 1990s, including significant budget cuts and tax increases, to reduce the country's high public debt and control inflation. The entry into the eurozone was seen as a major political and economic achievement, symbolizing Italy's core place in Europe and promising lower interest rates and greater monetary stability by abandoning the historically volatile lira.

Nevertheless, the 1999 fixation also locked Italy into a relatively strong exchange rate, a point of later economic debate. While the immediate benefits included reduced transaction costs for trade and the elimination of currency risk within the EU, some analysts argued that the conversion rate overvalued Italian industry's competitiveness. This, combined with the loss of independent monetary policy and the ability to devalue the lira, would later be cited as a contributing factor to Italy's prolonged economic stagnation and loss of export share in the subsequent decades, especially compared to Germany. Thus, 1999 marked a moment of both triumph and a fundamental, irreversible shift in Italy's economic policy framework.
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