目录
| 正面描述 | The obverse is printed in shades of brown and rose on a light guilloche underprint, with the denomination numeral 10000 in large figures at upper left and a three-quarter portrait vignette of Policarpa Salavarrieta at right center, her name inscribed below in small lettering. The bank title BANCO DE LA REPÚBLICA and country name COLOMBIA appear across the top, with the denomination legend DIEZ MIL PESOS in bold intaglio lettering at center left. Two facsimile signatures of bank officials appear at lower left, with the date of issue printed above them. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 签名 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 防伪类型 | Watermark, Security thread, Intaglio printing |
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| 备注 |
Colombia's decision to print its own banknotes domestically through the Banco de la República's in-house printing facility — one of the few central banks in Latin America to do so — means this note was produced entirely without outsourcing to the major European or American security printers that supplied most of the region through the twentieth century. That self-sufficiency was a deliberate policy, not an accident of geography.
The 2001 introduction of this denomination coincided with the peso's gradual recovery in public confidence following the catastrophic 1999 financial crisis, when Colombia's GDP contracted nearly five percent — the worst single-year contraction since the 1930s. The 10,000-peso note absorbed significant everyday transaction volume as inflation had eroded lower denominations.