Catalog
| Issuer | Norges midlertidige Rigsbank |
|---|---|
| Year | 1815 |
| Type | Standard circulation banknote |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | No. Een Halv Rigsbankdaler. 48 Rbſk. Udſtædt af Norges midlertidige Rigs: bank for 1/2 Rbdlr., og validere denne Seddel imidlertid for 48 Rigsbank: Skilling, hvorfor den igien af Rigsban1. ken indlöses. Christiania 1814. Not |
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| Protection description | Impressed dry stamp with the Norwegian coat of arms applied at the top center of the obverse. |
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| Comments |
Norges midlertidige Rigsbank — the Norwegian Provisional State Bank — was established in 1816, but preparatory notes like this one were printed and issued in 1815 as Norway scrambled to build monetary infrastructure following the 1814 dissolution of the union with Denmark. The country had inherited almost nothing from Copenhagen in terms of functioning banking apparatus, and these early emissions were stopgap instruments issued under genuinely improvised conditions.
The dual denomination — ½ Rigsbankdaler and its equivalent in 48 Rigsbankskilling — reflects the transitional arithmetic of the Riksbank system, itself only recently reformed. The sole security measure was an embossed dry stamp, a low-cost solution that proved easy to counterfeit and contributed to the note's rapid replacement.