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| 正面描述 | Intaglio portrait of Inca Garcilaso de la Vega at right against a multicolour guilloche underprint, with the Peruvian national coat of arms in the central vignette and the denomination numeral 10000 in large gothic figures at lower left. Three facsimile signatures appear beneath the central vignette, identifying the Director, Presidente, and Gerente General, with the issue date printed in red at lower left. The face value is rendered in full as DIEZ MIL SOLES DE ORO across the upper register. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The central vignette presents two complementary agricultural scenes: at left, an Andean figure operating a traditional foot plough (chaquitaclla) in a cultivated field, and at centre-right, a woman kneeling among low cotton plants in harvest, with a distant tree line across the background. The denomination numeral 10000 appears vertically at left, while pre-Columbian geometric motifs form a decorative border panel at right, and the printer's imprint of Thomas De La Rue & Company Limited is placed at lower left. |
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| 备注 |
Peru's 10,000 Soles de Oro denomination existed because inflation had already gutted the currency's lower rungs by the late 1970s. Annual inflation exceeded 60% in 1979 and kept climbing through 1981, making high-denomination notes necessary almost as soon as they were issued. The Soles de Oro series would ultimately be replaced by the Inti in 1985 — by which point the 10,000 Sol note was effectively small change.
Thomas De La Rue's involvement is unsurprising; the Banco Central de Reserva relied on them for much of this period's output. The watermark is the sole listed security feature, which reflects the assumption that notes of this value would cycle quickly rather than invite sustained scrutiny.