Catálogo
| Emisor | Government of Bangladesh |
|---|---|
| Año | 1973-1976 |
| Tipo | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Valor | 1 Taka |
| Moneda | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Composición | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Tamaño | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Forma | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Impresor | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Diseñador(es) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Grabador(es) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| En circulación hasta | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Referencia(s) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
|---|---|
| Leyenda del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del reverso | The Bangladesh National Emblem — a water lily (shapla) rising above stylised waves, flanked by rice sheaves and surmounted by three connected jute leaves with four stars — rendered as an intaglio vignette within a dotted circular frame at right-centre, set against a two-tone underprint of pale blue and golden-ochre guilloche. Bengali script lettering of the issuer's name runs along the top border and the denomination appears in a solid panel along the lower edge, with the numeral '1' in each corner cartouche. |
| Leyenda del reverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Firma(s) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Tipo de protección | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción de la protección | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Variantes | P#5a(1) - watermark: Tiger's head signature: Matiul Islam (3-1973) P#5a(2) - watermark: Tiger's head signature: Kafiluddin Mahmood (1974-1975) P#5b - without watermark signature: Kafiluddin Mahmood (10-1976) |
| Comentarios |
Bangladesh declared independence in March 1971, but the new government's currency infrastructure took time to establish. The 1 Taka notes of this series were issued by the Government rather than Bangladesh Bank — a deliberate distinction, as small-denomination notes in the subcontinent have historically been treated as government instruments rather than central bank liabilities, a convention inherited directly from British India.
Three signature varieties exist, tracking two successive Finance Secretaries across a compressed four-year window. The 1976 variety dropped the watermark entirely — a production change whose precise rationale is undocumented but which makes that issue straightforwardly distinguishable from its predecessors.