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1 Mil Réis Thesouro Nacional, 3rd print

Issuer Thesouro Nacional
Year 1860
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Reference(s) P#A219
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Obverse lettering 1 HUM 1 HUM 1 HUM IMPERIO DO BRAZIL NO THESOURO NACIONAL SE PAGARÁ AO PORTADOR DESTA A QUANTIA DE HUM MIL REIS VALOR RECEBIDO
(Translation: Empire of Brazil at the National Treasury the holder will be paid the amount of One Thousand Réis Amount received)
Reverse description Unprinted blank verso bearing extensive manuscript annotations in brown ink, including a handwritten administrative note destined for examination and receipt by the Thesouraria de Fazenda da Província de Mato Grosso, referencing the Thesouraria da Secção de Substituição do Papel-moeda and dated 4 de Março de 1868, with two manuscript signatures below.
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Comments

Brazil's Imperial Treasury turned to Perkins, Bacon & Petch for much of its mid-century paper currency, relying on the firm's steel-engraving technology — the same method that made their banknote and stamp work notoriously difficult to counterfeit. This 1860 issue is the third print of the 1 Mil Réis, a denomination that circulated heavily at the lower end of daily commerce and suffered accordingly. Survivors in presentable condition are genuinely uncommon precisely because the note was used, not saved.

The Thesouro Nacional series predates the Republic by three decades, issued under Pedro II at a moment when Brazil's paper currency still competed uneasily with coin in public trust.

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