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obverse
reverse

5 Euro (Sistine Chapel Frescoes) – Italy

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 500th Anniversary of the unveilling of the Sistine Chapel Frescoes (1512-2012)
Italy
Context
Year: 2012
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1946)
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 26,000
Material
Diameter: 32 mm
Weight: 18 g
Silver weight: 16.65 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard359
Numista: #37874
Value
Exchange value: 5 EUR = $5.91
Bullion value: $48.25
Inflation-adjusted value: 6.31 EUR

Obverse

Description:
Sistine Chapel ignudo detail by Colaneri. "REPUBBLICA ITALIANA" surrounds it.
Inscription:
REPUBBLICA ITALIANA
Translation:
Italian Republic
Script: Latin
Language: Italian

Reverse

Description:
Ignudo detail, referencing the ceiling's unifying allegory. Right: arch-shaped "CAPPELLA SISTINA" with years 1512 and 2012. Left: face value "EURO 5" and mintmark "R".
Inscription:
CAPPELLA SISTINA

R

EURO 5

1512

2012
Translation:
Sistine Chapel

R

5 Euro

1512

2012
Script: Latin
Languages: Italian, Latin

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2012R19,000BU
2012R7,000Proof

Historical background

In 2012, Italy found itself at the epicenter of the Eurozone debt crisis, a period of severe financial strain that threatened the stability of the single currency. The country was burdened by a massive public debt exceeding 120% of its GDP, stagnant economic growth, and high borrowing costs. Investors, losing confidence in Italy's ability to manage its finances, demanded increasingly high yields to hold Italian government bonds, pushing the 10-year BTP yield above 7%—a level widely seen as unsustainable. This created a dangerous feedback loop where fears of default raised borrowing costs, which in turn worsened the debt outlook, pushing Italy toward a potential need for a sovereign bailout that the European rescue funds were ill-equipped to handle.

The situation was a direct threat to the euro itself, as Italy's economy was deemed "too big to fail but too big to save." The crisis was fundamentally a crisis of confidence in both Italian economic governance and the European Central Bank's (ECB) role as a lender of last resort. Domestically, technocrat Prime Minister Mario Monti, appointed in late 2011, implemented harsh austerity measures and structural reforms to restore fiscal credibility. However, these austerity policies also deepened a recession, exacerbating social unrest and political fragmentation within the country.

The turning point came in the summer of 2012 when ECB President Mario Draghi delivered his historic "whatever it takes" speech, pledging to do everything necessary to preserve the euro. This commitment culminated in the announcement of the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) program, a conditional bond-buying backstop. While no Italian bonds were ever purchased under OMT, the mere announcement dramatically reduced Italian borrowing costs by alleviating existential fears about the euro's breakup. Thus, 2012 ended with the immediate pressure subsiding, but with Italy's underlying structural economic weaknesses—low growth, high debt, and political instability—largely unresolved.
💎 Very Rare