This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Naples, Migliaccio, 1790. 8th, pp. XVI-158. Contemporary binding in full parchment, calligraphic title on the spine, slight defects. Restoration on the frontispiece, light browning, slight foxing. Very rare original edition. § United, in the same volume: Response to some criticisms made on the work entitled "On the present state of the currency in the Kingdom of Naples and the need for an increase". Naples, 1792. 8th, pp. 30.
The work of Diodati (Naples 1763 - 1832) was considered by his contemporaries to be of fundamental importance, making use of the reading of the works of C. A. Broggia, Galiani and G. R. Carli (with the latter he appears to be in correspondence), he supported the need to raise the nominal value of Neapolitan gold and silver coins. The work achieved wide diffusion, so much so that D. himself could boast of having inspired the measures adopted in Genoa in that same year 1790 for the coinage of gold. But his proposal was not accepted by the Neapolitan government, which resorted to the expedient of increasing monetary circulation by issuing paper money. Furthermore, there was no lack of critical comments on his work: in the early 1990s a highly critical memoir was written, addressed to the king, and D. found himself forced to reiterate his arguments in a small volume published in Naples in 1994 (Response to some criticisms made of the work entitled: On the present state of money in the Kingdom of Naples). Diodati also introduced the circulation of foreign hard currencies into the Kingdom, regulating the exchange rate with official price lists ("tariff" of 1805) and devised wordings engraved along the edges of the new coin issues (piazze and half-plates) which prevented fraudulent "shearing" of circulating coins by the underworld. See Kress Library, 590. Catalono Einaudi, 1571. Fornari II, pag. 349 - 356.
To request a Condition Report, please contact libriestampe@finarte.it
The department will provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Please note that what Finarte declares with respect to the state of conservation of the objects corresponds only to a qualified opinion and that we are not professional conservators or restorers.
We urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. We always suggest prospective buyers to inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition during the exhibition days as indicated in the catalog.
316
317
318
319
320
322
324
325
326