The quattrini was one of the three silver
coins that circulated in fourteenthcentury
Florence. The “quattrini affair”
refers to a devaluation of the quattrini in
1371 that set in motion a course of
events leading in 1378 to a popular
uprising and a brief dictatorship of the
proletariat.
The Florentine money of account was
the lira, originally meaning a pound of
silver, and in the Florentine currency
system 240 denarii equaled 1 lira,
60 quattrini equaled 1 lira, and 8 grossi
also equaled 1 lira. Florence also minted
the florin, a gold coin that circulated
mainly in international trade and among
the wealthiest members of society. The
exchange rate between silver coins and
florins varied with the silver content of
silver coins.
The money stock of a 14th-century
Italian city-state consisted of a varying
medley of domestic and foreign coins
and the rate of coinage depended on the
amount of private silver brought to the
mint. Private persons took their silver to
city-state mints that struck coins with the
greatest excess of face value per weight
of silver. A city-state such as Florence
could debase the silver content of its currency,
increasing the face value of its
coinage relative to silver content, and
attract more silver to its mint. The system
encouraged cities to engage in competitive
devaluation, and devaluation
became a plague that spread from one
city to another.
Florentine authorities balked at currency
devaluation, and by the mid-14th
century the coinage of denarii, quattrini,
and grossi came to a halt because no silver
was brought to the mint. Currency
from Pisa invaded the Florentine economy,
driving out Florentine currency in
accordance with Gresham’s law that bad
money drives out good. In 1366, the Florentine
authorities gave way and slashed
the silver content of the denaro, the most
overvalued of the Florentine coins, by
36 percent. The authorities also banned
the circulation of petty foreign currency,
apparently under the expectation that
the ban would have no practical
significance.
Next, Florentine grossi and quattrini
came under pressure as Pisan grossi and
quattrini with the same face value but
less silver content were exchanged for
the Florentine coins. Florentine grossi
stood only slightly above Pisan grossi in
silver content, and in 1366, Florence
debased the grossi by 2.5 percent, a sufficient
debasement to bring Florentine
grossi into parity with Pisan grossi.
The Florentine quattrini, overvalued
relative to Pisan quattrini by a good
18 percent, now came under pressure. The
Florentines had sought to avoid devaluing
the quattrini because local prices were
most often quoted in quattrini and the
whole domestic price structure and monetary
stability depended on quattrini. The
invasion of devalued Pisan currency again
forced the hand of the Florentines, and in
1371, the silver content of Florentine quattrini
fell by 18 percent and Florentine
denarii by 5 percent.
Silver flowed into Florentine mints
with the rise in face value relative to silver
content, and soon a boom in the
coinage of quattrini and denarii was
underway. As supplies of quattrini and
denarii soared, the forces of currency
depreciation made themselves felt with a
merciless logic, in time sending a thunderclap
through the Florentine economy.
ntent of the silver coinage fell, prices
rose faster than wages, and discontent
rose to a boiling point among the minor
artisans. In 1378, Michele di Lando, a
barefoot workingman, led the wool
carders in a proletarian revolution against
the financial oligarchy that ruled
Florence. The revolutionaries dismissed
the government officials, established a
dictatorship of the proletariat, and set out
to reform society, repealing laws against
unionization, enfranchising unions of
lower-paid workers, imposing a 12-year
debt moratorium on debts of wage earners,
and reducing interest rates. Businesses
fought back by closing down and
recruiting outside forces to overthrow the
government. The proletarians split into
factions between more conservative
skilled labors and unskilled labors sympathetic
with communistic ideas. An armed
force from the countryside overthrew the
government in 1381, but not before the
government had melted down large quantities
of quattrini in an effort to end the
pressures for currency depreciation.
The quattrini affair gives some support
to Lenin’s comment that the best
way to destroy the capitalist society is to
debauch its currency. Inflation and monetary
instability have attended all major
revolutions, including the French Revolution,
the Russian Revolution, and the
Chinese Revolution.