Napoleonic monetary reform In order to bring order to the French monetary system, on August 15, 1795, the
National Convention introduced the use of the
decimal base and
bimetallism, a system that was not implemented until 1803 by
Napoleon. The silver
franc was adopted as the basic unit; multiples worth more than 5 francs were minted in gold, while copper was allowed to be used for cents. Following the
Italian campaign led by Napoleon, the
Kingdom of Italy was born in 1805, which, being a de facto French dependency, assumed the new decimal-based monetary system. The
Italian lira was then created, a currency totally equivalent to the
French franc and therefore usable in both France and Italy. The coin, which represented the hundredth part of the lira, was minted starting in 1807 in the mints of Bologna,
Venice and
Milan, which in particular also became the mint where all the coinage of the kingdom was prepared. The coin weighed 2.1 g, had a diameter of 19.5 mm and was composed of a 950‰ copper alloy. The cent was officially minted until 1813, but its issuance probably continued after the
Battle of Waterloo; due to the lack of new coinage, the Austrians continued to use the Milan mint until 1819 to issue the Napoleonic copper and silver coins.
The Restoration With the
restoration of the European monarchies, Napoleonic reforms were also abolished in the monetary sphere. The
Austrian Empire, which ruled northern Italy with the
Lombardy-Venetia Kingdom, replaced the Napoleonic lira with the
Austrian lira, a currency in dual circulation and pegged to the
Austrian florin. Like the florin, the new lira did not follow the decimal base: its multiples were the
scudo and the
sovereign, worth 6 and 40 Austrian lira, respectively. Despite this, the submultiples of the lira followed the decimal base; just as the florin was divided into 100
soldi, the lira also consisted of 100 cents. Due to this monetary system, starting in 1822 in the mints of Milan and Venice, the minting of 1-cent coins of the Austrian lira, which had different measurements from the Napoleonic ones, was started. These coins entered circulation following a regime of forced tender; therefore, it was not possible to convert them into gold or silver, and furthermore, payment between private individuals with this currency was limited to a quarter of a lira. Despite the Restoration and the abolition of the Napoleonic reforms, some Italian states continued to use the decimal monetary system; among them was the
Kingdom of Sardinia under
Victor Emmanuel I. In the Kingdom of Sardinia, the minting of 1
lira cent copper coins began in 1826 under
Charles Felix; the coin had different characteristics from the Napoleonic coin: it weighed 2 g and had a diameter of 19 mm. During the reign of
Charles Albert, between February 22, 1847, and May 15, 1848, Carlo Felice's coinage was reused to make up for the lack of loose change, while with
Victor Emmanuel II no coins of this denomination were issued until the founding of the Kingdom of Italy. In 1842, 1-cent coins of 15 mm in diameter and 1 g in weight were minted for circulation in Sardinia, measures that would later be adopted in what would become the Kingdom of Italy. In addition to the Kingdom of Sardinia, the
Duchy of Parma and Piacenza also retained the Napoleonic decimal system, and in 1830, during the reign of
Marie Louise of Austria, 2029360 1-cent coins were minted with the same characteristics as those of the Kingdom of Sardinia. This coin was also minted in 1854 with the effigy of
Charles III in only 300000 examples, of which 20 are supposed to have survived.
The unification of Italy When the
revolution of 1848 was over, the
Lombardy-Venetia Kingdom came under the rule of the revolutionaries, and the Provisional Government of Milan and the
Republic of San Marco were born. Following these events, the
Kingdom of Sardinia began the
first war of independence, and the two newly formed revolutionary governments replaced the
Austrian lira with a new coinage based on the
Savoy lira. In particular, the Republic of San Marco, with Decree No. 565 of January 15, 1849, minted 2760000 1-cent coins of the current lira in the Venice mint, with different measurements than the Savoy lira; the coin, although made of copper, was 18 mm in diameter and weighed 1 g. The
Risorgimento came into full swing when the insurgent Legation of Romagne between 1859 and 1860, in order to avoid continuing to use the papal coinage, began minting 1-cent coins reusing Carlo Felice's old 1826 coinage. The provisional government of Tuscany also minted new coinage and so in 1860 commissioned the Ralph Heaton Firm of
Birmingham to mint new 1-cent coins bearing the year 1859, using the Sardinian format of 1842. == Kingdom of Italy ==