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The obverse is printed in dark blue-black and orange tones, with a central vignette of indigenous Bolivian agricultural workers — a woman carrying goods and a man laboring in a field — set against a rural landscape with thatched dwellings. Large ornate numeral '10' medallions in guilloche underprint flank the central scene on both left and right, with the bank title 'EL BANCO MERCANTIL' in bold letterpress across the top. The place of issue 'ORURO, BOLIVIA' appears at lower left, the date '1º de Julio de 1906' at lower center-right, and the denomination 'DIEZ BOLIVIANOS' with the promise clause 'PAGARÁ A LA VISTA AL PORTADOR EN MONEDA CORRIENTE' is inscribed centrally below the vignette. |
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The reverse is printed entirely in red-brown, centered on an oval vignette of a large neoclassical building — likely the Banco Mercantil headquarters — with a clock tower, palm trees, and figures in the foreground plaza. The vignette is framed by elaborate guilloche lacework borders that extend across the full face of the note, with the numeral '10' in ornate cartouches at the left and right margins. The bank name 'BANCO' appears at the top center and 'MERCANTIL' at the bottom center, separated by the central architectural scene. |
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The Banco Mercantil was one of several private Bolivian banks of issue operating under the 1890 banking law, which permitted chartered commercial banks to circulate their own notes — a system that persisted until the Bolivian government moved to centralize currency control in the early 1910s. The American Bank Note Company handled the bulk of South American private bank printing during this period, and the quality of engraving on these issues far exceeded what circulated in practice.
Bolivia's high-altitude economy meant notes often passed through remote mining regions where physical wear was severe. Surviving examples from this series in presentable condition are genuinely uncommon.