Logo Title
obverse
reverse
1925collection CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Years: 1919–1937
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Currency:
(1861—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 405,918,487
Material
Diameter: 22.5 mm
Weight: 5.34 g
Thickness: 1.9 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard60
Numista: #1960
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 ITL

Obverse

Description:
King Vittorio Emanuele III facing left, with the artist's name below and lettering around the portrait.
Inscription:
VITTORIO EMANVELE III RE D'ITALIA

A. MOTTI
Translation:
Victor Emmanuel III King of Italy

A. Motti
Script: Latin
Language: Italian

Reverse

Description:
Honeybee on a flower, with mintmark left, date bottom, and value bottom right.
Inscription:
C.10

R

1925

R. BROZZI
Translation:
R
1925
R. Brozzi
Script: Latin
Language: Italian
Engraver: Renato Brozzi

Edge

Plain

Categories

Animal> Insect
Plants> Flower

Mints

NameMark
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1919R986,000
1920R37,995,000
1921R66,510,000
1922R45,217,487
1923R31,529,000
1924R35,312,000
1925R22,370,000
1926R25,190,000
1927R22,673,000
1928R15,680,000
1929R15,593,000
1930R17,115,000
1931R10,750,000
1932R5,678,000
1933R10,250,000
1934R18,300,000
1935R10,500,000
1936R8,770,000
1937R5,500,000

Historical background

In the aftermath of the First World War, Italy faced a severe and multifaceted currency crisis rooted in the financial methods used to fund the conflict. The government had largely abandoned the gold standard and financed the war not through taxation but through massive borrowing from the Bank of Italy and from its own citizens via war bonds. This led to an enormous expansion of the money supply, with paper currency in circulation increasing more than sevenfold between 1914 and 1919. Consequently, the value of the Italian lira plummeted on foreign exchange markets, losing over half of its pre-war value against currencies like the US dollar and British pound, while domestic inflation soared, eroding purchasing power.

The situation was exacerbated by the structural weaknesses of the Italian economy and the political turmoil of the period. The country was deeply divided, burdened with heavy war debts, and contained a stark north-south economic divide. The post-war governments, fragile and short-lived, faced immense pressure to maintain social stability amidst rising unemployment and socialist agitation. Rather than imposing austerity, they continued deficit spending to subsidize essential goods and support industries, further fueling inflation. This created a vicious cycle where the falling external value of the lira increased the cost of vital imports like coal and grain, which in turn drove domestic prices higher and put more pressure on the currency.

By 1919, Italy was thus caught in a classic post-war inflationary spiral with a sharply depreciating currency. The crisis set the stage for the economic and social unrest that would characterize the Biennio Rosso (1919-1920) and ultimately contribute to the political conditions that brought Benito Mussolini and the Fascists to power in 1922. The lira's instability would remain a central economic problem throughout the 1920s, culminating in Mussolini's politically driven "Battle for the Lira" in 1927, which revalued the currency at great cost to the Italian economy.

Series: 1919 Italy circulation coins

5 Centesimi obverse
5 Centesimi reverse
5 Centesimi
1919-1937
10 Centesimi obverse
10 Centesimi reverse
10 Centesimi
1919-1937
50 Centesimi obverse
50 Centesimi reverse
50 Centesimi
1919-1935
🌱 Very Common