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| 表面の説明 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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| 表面の銘文 | BANCO CENTRAL DE CHILE MIL CONDORES CONVERTIBLES EN ORO CONFORME A LA LEY. DIEZ MIL SANTIAGO, 1º de Febrero de 1932. DEZ MIL PESOS TALLERES DE ESPECIES VALORADAS. SANTIAGO, CHILE. (Translation: Central Bank of Chile One Thousand Condores Convertible into Gold in Conformity with the Law. Ten Thousand Santiago, February 1st., 1932. Ten Thousand Pesos) |
| 裏面の説明 | Printed in blue and purple, the reverse centres on an elaborate guilloche rosette from which the bold, shadowed numeral "10.000" emerges in large letterpress characters. A finely engraved geometric lathe-work border frames the entire composition, with a stepped inner rule enclosing the central motif. |
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| 偽造防止技術 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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Chile's catastrophic economic collapse in the early 1930s — among the worst of any country globally during the Great Depression, by several measures — forced the Banco Central into increasingly large denominations for basic transactions. The 1932 date on this note falls squarely in that trough. The dual denomination, expressing value simultaneously in both Pesos and Condores, reflects the 1925 monetary reform under which the Condor was introduced at 10 Pesos, though in practice the old Peso remained the dominant unit in everyday speech.
Printed domestically by the Talleres de Especies Valoradas — Chile's own state security printing works — rather than sent abroad to Bradbury Wilkinson or American Bank Note as earlier issues had been.