Tuscan lira

Summary

The lira (plural: lire) was the currency of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany until its annexation by Napoleonic France in 1807. After that year, it unofficially remained in circulation thanks to its silver value until the restoration of Tuscan independence in 1814. It was finally abolished in 1826.

Tuscan lira
Lira (Italian)
10 lire coin ("dena") depicting Charles Louis
Denominations
Subunit
160quattrino (q.)
Coinsq.1, q.2, s.12, s.1, s.2, q.10
1 lira, 5 lire, 10 lire
 Rarely used20 lire, 40 lire
Demographics
User(s)Tuscany Tuscany
Etruria
Issuance
MintFlorence Mint
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

History edit

It was subdivided into 20 soldi, each of 3 quattrini or 12 denari (singular: soldo, quattrino, denaro). Other denominations included the crazia worth q.5; the grosso worth q.20; the paolo worth q.40 or 23 lira; the testone worth 3 paoli; and the crown-sized francescone worth 10 paoli or 6+23 lire.

In 1803 the Tuscan lira was equivalent to 0.84 French francs, 0.84 Italian lira, or 3.78 grams of fine silver. In 1826 it was replaced by the Tuscan fiorino worth 100 quattrini or 1+23 lira.

Coins edit

In the late 18th century, copper coins circulated in denominations of q.1, q.2, and s.1, together with billon q.10 and silver 12, 1, 2, 5 and 10 paoli. In the early 19th century, copper s.12 and s.2 were added, together with silver 1 lira and 10 lire.

The 10-lira coin was known as dena and the 5-lira coin was known as meza-dena ("half-dena").[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Browne, William Alfred (1872). The Merchants' Handbook (Second ed.). London: Edward Stanford. pp. 46–50.
  • Krause, Chester L.; Clifford Mishler (1978). Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1979 Edition. Colin R. Bruce II (senior editor) (5th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873410203.