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obverse
reverse
Numismatica Ranieri

50000 Lire (Church of San Giovanni degli Eremiti in Palermo) – Italy

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 850th Anniversary of the construction of the Church of San Giovanni degli Eremiti in Palermo
Italy
Context
Year: 1998
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1946)
Currency:
(1861—2001)
Demonetization: 28 February 2002
Total mintage: 4,900
Material
Diameter: 20 mm
Weight: 7.5 g
Gold weight: 6.75 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard228
Numista: #59508
Value
Exchange value: 50000 ITL
Bullion value: $1126.08
Inflation-adjusted value: 85410.00 ITL

Obverse

Description:
Exterior view of Palermo's Church of San Giovanni degli Eremiti, framed by two cloister arcades. The author's name is at the church's base.
Inscription:
REPUBBLICA ITALIANA

MOMONI
Translation:
Italian Republic

Coins
Script: Latin
Language: Italian
Engraver: Claudia Momoni

Reverse

Description:
Church interior view. Anniversary dates below; value and mintmark above.
Inscription:
L. 50

MILA LIRE

R

S. GIOVANNI DEGLI EREMITI

1148 - 1998
Script: Latin
Engraver: Claudia Momoni

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1998R4,900Proof

Historical background

In 1998, Italy was in the final, intense phase of a multi-decade effort to qualify for the European Union's Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). The goal was to be among the founding members of the euro, set to launch in 1999. This required meeting the strict convergence criteria of the Maastricht Treaty, including limits on budget deficits, public debt, inflation, and interest rates, and maintaining stable exchange rates within the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM). For Italy, a country historically plagued by high public debt and fiscal instability, this was a monumental challenge, often referred to as "lo strappo" (the tear) from its inflationary past.

The Prodi government, in power from 1996, had implemented severe austerity measures, including a one-time "Eurotax," to curb the budget deficit. By 1998, these efforts had borne fruit: the deficit was brought down to 2.7% of GDP (below the 3% Maastricht limit), and inflation was under control. However, Italy's colossal public debt, at around 120% of GDP, remained far above the 60% reference value. Its admission, therefore, hinged on a political interpretation of the Treaty's clause that debt must be "sufficiently diminishing and approaching the reference value at a satisfactory pace."

On May 2, 1998, the EU Council made the historic decision to include Italy in the first wave of euro participants. This was a politically charged choice, rewarding the country's recent fiscal discipline and reform momentum over its still-daunting debt burden. Consequently, for the remainder of 1998, the Italian lira operated with its exchange rate irrevocably fixed first against other ERM currencies and then, as of December 31, against the euro itself (1 EUR = 1936.27 ITL). The year thus marked Italy's successful, if hard-won, passage from a period of monetary vulnerability into the core of a new European monetary era.
Legendary