Catalogo
| Emittente | Division del Bravo, State of Nuevo León |
|---|---|
| Anno | 1914 |
| Tipo | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Valore | 1 Peso (1 MXP) |
| Valuta | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Composizione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Dimensioni | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Forma | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Stampatore | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Disegnatore/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Incisore/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| In circolazione fino al | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Riferimento/i | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione del dritto | Black letterpress print on a pink underprint, with red serial numbers. A central vignette bears the Mexican national eagle devouring a serpent. Text blocks carry the issuing authority, denomination, and date of issue, laid out in a formal military-government style. |
|---|---|
| Legenda del dritto | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione del rovescio | Printed in red, the reverse is dominated by a wide horizontal guilloche oval at centre, flanked by symmetrical acanthus scroll ornaments extending to both lateral edges. Three circular stamp impressions are applied in red ink: one at centre bearing 'EJERCITO NACIONAL / DIVISION DEL BRAVO', one at left reading 'JEFATURA DE HACIENDA / MONTERREY N.L.', and one at right reading 'GOBIERNO DEL ESTADO LIBRE Y SOBERANO DE NUEVO LEON'. A short text band across the central oval carries the forced-circulation legend. |
| Legenda del rovescio | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Firma/e | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Tipo di protezione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Descrizione della protezione | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Varianti | Accedi per vedere i dettagli |
| Commenti |
The División del Bravo was a Constitutionalist military division operating in northeastern Mexico during the revolution, and its paper emissions were functional field money — issued to pay troops and procure supplies when coined silver had vanished from circulation almost entirely. Nuevo León saw intensive hoarding from 1913 onward as the Huerta government's credit collapsed, leaving regional commanders with little choice but to print their own instruments.
P#S937 sits within a crowded field of Constitutionalist military issues from 1914, many of which were repudiated, counterfeited, or simply abandoned as command structures shifted. Provenance matters more than condition here — documentation tying a note to a specific garrison or paymaster record is genuinely rare.