Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1858–1864
Country: Vatican City Country flag
Issuer: Papal States
Ruler: Pius IX
Currency:
(1835—1866)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 2,648,976
Material
Diameter: 16.5 mm
Weight: 1.43 g
Silver weight: 1.14 g
Thickness: 0.82 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 80% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1341b
Numista: #38288
Value
Bullion value: $3.30

Obverse

Description:
Papal coat of arms.
Inscription:
PIUS٠IX٠PON٠MAX٠A٠XVIII٠
Translation:
Pius IX, Pontifex Maximus, Year 18.
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Valued year encircled.
Inscription:
5

BAIOCCHI

1863

R
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
BolognaB
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1858B224,000
1858R1,573,120
1859B173,177
1859R82,600
1860R168,520
1861R147,300
1862R135,324
1863R43,609
1864R101,326

Historical background

In 1858, the Papal States faced a complex and strained monetary situation, characteristic of the pre-unification Italian peninsula. The state lacked a unified, modern currency system, instead operating with a circulation of multiple coin types. The official standard was the Papal Scudo, divided into 100 Baiocchi, with the Scudo itself valued at 5 French francs due to the influence of the Latin Monetary Union. However, in practice, a bewildering variety of coins circulated simultaneously, including older local issues, coins from neighboring Italian states like Tuscany and the Two Sicilies, and foreign currencies, particularly French and Austrian coins. This proliferation created chronic confusion in commerce and facilitated widespread counterfeiting.

The financial health of the Papal treasury was precarious, heavily reliant on deficit spending and loans to cover administrative costs and the maintenance of a large clerical bureaucracy. Revenues from taxes, customs, and ecclesiastical sources were insufficient, leading to periodic debasement of coinage to generate seigniorage profit. While Pope Pius IX’s government had introduced some modern silver and gold coins in the 1850s, confidence in the currency was undermined by the state’s political instability and its dependence on French military support to maintain temporal power against growing nationalist movements.

Ultimately, the currency situation reflected the broader economic and political fragility of the Papal States on the eve of Italian unification. The lack of a strong, exclusive monetary authority mirrored the weakening temporal sovereignty of the Pope. Within three years, with the annexation of most papal territories into the Kingdom of Italy in 1860-61, the Papal States' currency would begin to be withdrawn and replaced by the unified Italian lira, marking the end of its independent monetary history save for the drastically reduced territory of Vatican City.

Series: 1858 Papal States circulation coins

20 Baiocchi obverse
20 Baiocchi reverse
20 Baiocchi
1858
5 Baiocchi obverse
5 Baiocchi reverse
5 Baiocchi
1858-1864
10 Baiocchi obverse
10 Baiocchi reverse
10 Baiocchi
1858-1864
20 Baiocchi obverse
20 Baiocchi reverse
20 Baiocchi
1858-1864
1 Scudo d'Oro obverse
1 Scudo d'Oro reverse
1 Scudo d'Oro
1858-1865
Rare