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| Issuer | Banco Provincial de Córdoba |
|---|---|
| Year | 1873 |
| Type | Local banknote |
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| Obverse description | The obverse is printed in blue-green ink and carries the denomination fraction 1/2 in each corner. At upper centre, the series designation "SERIE 6." and a six-digit serial number are printed in letterpress. A vignette of a male portrait in period dress occupies the left field, while a perched bird of prey appears in the right vignette. The central text panel reads "El Banco Provincial de Córdoba pagará a la vista UN PESO BOLIVIANO al portador" with the bold legend "MEDIO REAL BOLIVIANO" and the date "Córdoba, Marzo 27 de 1873" below. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | SERIE 6. El Banco Provincial de Córdoba pagará a la vista UN PESO BOLIVIANO al portador MEDIO REAL BOLIVIANO Córdoba, Marzo 27 de 1873 1/2 |
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| Comments |
The Banco Provincial de Córdoba was one of several Argentine provincial banks operating under loose federal oversight in the early 1870s, each issuing its own paper currency with minimal coordination from Buenos Aires. The fractional denominations — and this ½ Real Boliviano is among the smallest — were printed specifically to address the chronic shortage of small change that plagued interior commerce, where silver coinage rarely circulated in sufficient quantity.
The "Real Boliviano" unit itself is a telling detail: Bolivian silver reales still served as an informal accounting standard in the Cuyo and northwestern provinces long after Argentine monetary unification was theoretically underway.