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Profile of a woman at left with a laurel crown; text "REPVBBLICA ITALIANA" "L 100"; goddess Minerva holding an olive tree and a long spear 1955-1989 100 lire €0.0516 18.20 mm 3.30 g Acmonital Profile of a woman at left with a laurel crown; text "REPVBBLICA ITALIANA" "L 100"; goddess Minerva holding an olive tree and a long spear 1990-1992
English: 500 lira coin, 1960, Italy. Silver assay value 835, diameter 29.4 mm, weight 11.04 g. Three caravels of Columbus are depicted on the obverse. Edge with an inscription in raised letters "(REPVBBLICA ITALIANA * * * 1960 * * *)".
Lire 10 and Lire 20 coins dated 2000 or 2001 were struck in sets only. The Lire 500 coin was the first bimetallic circulating coin, and was also the first circulating coin to feature Braille numerals (a Braille "L. 500" is on the upper rim of the coin's reverse, above the building).
Italian euro coins have a design unique to each denomination, though there is a common theme of famous Italian works of art throughout history. Each coin is designed by a different designer, from the 1 cent to the 2 euro coin they are: Eugenio Driutti, Luciana De Simoni, Ettore Lorenzo Frapiccini, Claudia Momoni, Maria Angela Cassol, Roberto Mauri, Laura Cretara and Maria Carmela Colaneri.
Towered Italy surrounded by the inscription "REPVBBLICA ITALIANA". In exergue L. CRETARA Face value among olive-tree branches, the date (1993) and the mint-mark (R) for Rome. On top: eagle; on bottom: dolphin
repvbblica italiana [a] The emblem of the Italian Republic ( Italian : emblema della Repubblica Italiana ) was formally adopted by the newly formed Italian Republic on 5 May 1948. Although often referred to as a coat of arms (or stemma in Italian), it is an emblem as it was not designed to conform to traditional heraldic rules.
The Italian Social Republic (Italian: Repubblica Sociale Italiana, Italian: [reˈpubblika soˈtʃaːle itaˈljaːna]; RSI; German: Italienische Sozialrepublik, German: [ˌiˑtaˈli̯eːnɪʃə zoˈtsi̯aːlʁepuˈbliːk]), known prior to December 1943 as the National Republican State of Italy (Italian: Stato Nazionale Repubblicano d'Italia; SNRI), but more popularly known as the Republic of ...
The Consulta of the République cisalpine receives the First Consul, 26 January 1802, Nicolas-André Monsiau, 1806–08. The Italian Republic was the successor of the Cisalpine Republic, which changed its constitution to allow the French First Consul Napoleon to become its president.