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1 Peso

Issuer Banco de Buenos Ayres
Year 1823
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Shape Rectangular
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Obverse lettering Un Peso
No.
PROMETE pagar á la vista y al Portador una onza de oro por diez y siete pesos en estos Villetes.
Yntervine
Por el Presidente
BANCO DE BUENOS AYRES
Nv. 20 de 1823
Reverse description The reverse is plain, without printed design elements, consistent with early nineteenth-century Argentine provincial note production.
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The Banco de Buenos Ayres was established in 1822 as Argentina's first formal banking institution, founded under the direction of Bernardino Rivadavia largely to finance the provincial government of Buenos Aires and stabilize a commodity-starved local economy. This note predates any national Argentine monetary authority by decades — the country had no central bank until 1935.

Printed locally rather than abroad, which was the exception rather than the rule for early Latin American paper issues of this period. The PS prefix in the Pick reference signals provisional or state-chartered status, reflecting that this was a provincial institution, not a sovereign one.

The bank collapsed in 1826 following a currency crisis tied to the Cisplatine War with Brazil.