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1 Peso

Emittent Banco de Marquez
Jahr 1899
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Nennwert 1 Peso
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung The obverse is printed in black and ochre tones on light paper. To the left, an intaglio vignette portrays a seated shepherdess with a lamb, enclosed in an oval frame; to the right, a finely engraved portrait of an elderly gentleman in formal attire. The central panel carries the bank title EL BANCO DE MARQUEZ in bold lettering, with the denomination UN PESO EN MONEDA CORRIENTE below, and the legend Pagaré al portador á la vista above; serial numbers appear in red at upper left and right, with the imprint of the American Bank Note Co., New York at the lower margin.
Vorderseitenlegende EL BANCO DE MARQUEZ
Pagaré al portador á la vista
UN PESO
EN MONEDA CORRIENTE
Barranquilla
EL PRESIDENTE DEL BANCO
DIRECTOR GERENTE
DIRECTOR
No.
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Anmerkungen

The Banco de Marquez was a regional Mexican bank operating under the 1897 Ley General de Instituciones de Crédito, which authorized a proliferation of state-chartered banks empowered to issue their own currency. Most of these institutions were short-lived, and their notes saw limited circulation outside their home states — which is precisely why ABNC-printed provincial Mexican issues from this period survive in disproportionately low numbers relative to the print runs the company typically produced.

American Bank Note Company handled the majority of Mexican provincial bank commissions in the 1890s, often recycling vignette elements across clients. Whether this note shares plate components with other ABNC Mexican issues of the period is worth examining against the company's own production records held at the Archives of American Art.

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