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10 Dinara

Issuer Narodna Banka Jugoslavije
Year 2000
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Size 139 x 66 mm
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Obverse description The left portion of the obverse is dominated by a large intaglio vignette of Stjepan Karađić, rendered in a detailed portrait style against a fine guilloche underprint extending across the note. The bank title NARODNA BANKA JUGOSLAVIJE runs vertically along the left margin in Cyrillic and Latin scripts, while the denomination numeral '10' appears in large digits at the lower right. The central field carries the bilingual denomination inscription in Cyrillic and Latin, accompanied by the stylized НБЈ / NBJ monogram of the bank.
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Reverse description The reverse carries a secondary portrait vignette at centre-right, set against a multicolour guilloche underprint in teal and rose tones. The Yugoslav state coat of arms appears at upper left alongside the city name BEOGRAD–VEOGRAD and the year 2000, with the governor's facsimile signature and the designation ГУВЕРНЕР–GUVERNER printed above the issuing authority legend. Large diagonal ЛАТИТУД / LATITUD and ПРИНТ / PRINT overprints in red and green identify this as a trial print, with the numeral '10' repeated at upper right and lower left.
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Comments

The P#152B is a late-series issue from a central bank that had spent the 1990s presiding over one of the most severe hyperinflationary collapses in recorded history — the 1993–94 episode required redenominations on the order of 1×10²⁷ to one. By 2000, the dinar had been restabilized and redenominated multiple times, and this note belongs to the relatively mundane post-hyperinflation period before the National Bank of Serbia assumed its successor role following the formal dissolution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 2003.

Zavod za Izradu Novčanica, the in-house Yugoslav security printer in Topčider, Belgrade, produced the entire late dinar series domestically — a point of national policy maintained even when hard currency for imported printing contracts was scarce.

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