کاتالوگ
| صادرکننده | Nippon Ginko / Bank of Japan |
|---|---|
| سال | 1885 |
| نوع | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| ارزش | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| واحد پول | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| جنس | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| ابعاد | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| شکل | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| چاپخانه | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| طراح(ان) | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| حکاک(ها) | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| در گردش تا | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| مرجع(ها) | P#22 |
| توضیحات روی اسکناس | The obverse is printed in blue and red on pale paper, with a large central vignette at right of Daikoku, the god of wealth, seated atop two bales of rice and holding a mallet, rendered in fine intaglio engraving. The issuer name in kanji runs horizontally across the upper portion of the note, with the denomination 壹圓 in large kanji characters at center. A circular red seal appears at lower left alongside serial numbers at upper left and lower right, and a text block in vertical Japanese script details the silver convertibility promise beneath the denomination. |
|---|---|
| نوشتههای روی اسکناس | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| توضیحات پشت اسکناس | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| نوشتههای پشت اسکناس | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| امضا(ها) | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| نوع ویژگی امنیتی | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| توضیحات ویژگی امنیتی | Official circular red intaglio seal of the Bank of Japan applied to both obverse and reverse. |
| گونهها | وارد شوید برای مشاهده جزئیات |
| یادداشتها |
The convertible note series introduced in 1885 was a direct consequence of Japan's Silver Coinage Act and the Matsukata fiscal reforms — Masayoshi Matsukata had spent years dismantling the inflationary inconvertible notes that had destabilized the economy through the late 1870s. Nippon Ginko itself had only been established in 1882, and this series was among its first formally convertible issues, redeemable in silver on demand.
Printed domestically by the Ministry of Finance's own bureau rather than contracted to a European firm, which was still the exception rather than the rule for Asian central banks in this period. Convertibility was suspended during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95 and never fully restored on silver terms — Japan moved to a gold standard in 1897, making this note's silver redemption guarantee functionally obsolete within twelve years of issue.