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Republic of Venice
Ludovico Manin
Ducato Gold Coin
威尼斯共和國
盧多維克·馬寧
達克特金幣
Item number: A1348
Year: AD 1789-1797
Material: Gold
Size: 18.4 x 19.2 mm
Weight: 4.3 g
Provenance: Fuchin Coin 2024
This is a milled ducato gold coin minted in the bustling commercial republic of Venice, located in the northeast of the Italian Peninsula.
On the obverse side of the coin, at the centre, stands the city’s patron saint, Saint Mark, holding a flag, while on the right side kneels the Doge of Venice. On the flag’s right side, the Latin abbreviation “DVX” represents the leader. The inscription “S.M.VBNET” on the left side is the abbreviation for Saint Mark, the patron saint of Venice, while the inscription on the right side “LVDOV·MANIN” presents the full name of the incumbent Doge of Venice, Ludovico Manin. When a new Doge takes office, only the name of the new Doge is changed on the ducato coin, while the rest of the inscriptions and images remain unchanged.
On the reverse side of the coin, at the centre, is an oval space formed by a circle of pearls, within which Jesus Christ, holding the Gospel book, is surrounded by sixteen stars. The inscription above reads “SIT.T.XPE.DAT.Q.TV.REGIS.ISTE.DVCA,” which translates to “Let this duchy which thou rulest be dedicated to thee, O Christ.”
In AD 1789, Ludovico Manin assumed the position of the last Doge of Venice. By this time, the once-mighty commercial empire that had dominated the Mediterranean had been reduced to a few scattered holdings around the Adriatic Sea. Even Venice’s once-feared navy had been significantly downsized.
In AD 1797, as Napoleon’s forces advanced into the Italian Peninsula, Venice chose to remain neutral, refraining from joining the coalition forces resisting the French invasion. However, on April 15, AD 1797, after receiving an ultimatum from French general Jean-Andoche Junot, Manin initially resisted but mounted only minimal opposition. Eventually, on May 12, AD 1797, Venice surrendered, marking the end of the Venetian Republic after more than a millennium of history.
Venice originally started as a small port under the jurisdiction of the Byzantine governors. However, with the weakening of the Byzantine Empire in the 9th century, Venice, under the leadership of successive rulers titled as Doges, gradually emerged as a leading maritime republic in the Mediterranean. The high quality and stable standard of the Venetian ducato coins made it a widely accepted international currency in the Mediterranean region. Other city-states in Italy and even the Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt began to imitate Venice by minting their own ducato coins.
However, with the advent of the 15th century and the Age of Discovery initiated by Spain and Portugal, Atlantic nations found new sea routes to India and China, and even discovered the New World in the Americas, gradually diminishing the importance of Venice. Eventually, facing Napoleon’s invasion in AD 1797, this commercial republic with a history spanning nearly a millennium faded into history.