目录
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| 正面铭文 | 10 - MUNT-BILJET VAN HET KONINGRYK DER NEDERLANDEN - 10 De effective Waarde door de Nederlandsche Bank over- genomen, ingevolge de Wet van den 18 Dec. 1845, St. Bl. No. 90. TIEN GULDEN - No MUNT-BILJET. Groot TIEN GULDEN. Uitgegeven ingevolge de wet van den 18 December 1845, Staatsblad No. 90, waarvoor de waarde bij de Nederlandsche Bank is overgebragt. Zegge f 10,-- - `s Gravenhage 1 Januarij 1846. Geregistreerd - De Minister van Financien, Geregistreerd voor TIEN GULDEN. Register Lett. D. 10 - De effective waarde overgebragt bij de Nederlandsche Bank. - 10 (Translation: Coin Note of the Kingdom of the Netherlands The effective Value taken over by the Dutch Bank, pursuant to the law of Dec. 18th 1845, Off. Gaz. No. 90. Ten Gulden Coin Note Ten Gulden. Issued pursuant to the law of December 18th 1845. Official Gazette No. 90, for which the value is transferred to the Dutch Bank. Say f 10,-- - 's Gravenhage January 1st 1846. Registered - The Minister of Finance Registered for Ten Gulden Register Lett. D. The effective value transferred to the Dutch Bank.) |
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| 防伪类型 | Watermark |
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The Dutch "muntbiljet" — coin note — was a peculiar instrument: legally a claim on silver coinage rather than a banknote in the conventional sense, issued by the Ministry of Finance rather than a central bank. The Netherlands had no central bank of issue for small-denomination paper at this period; De Nederlandsche Bank held a monopoly on higher-denomination notes, so the Treasury filled the gap with these low-value assignats tied directly to specie.
A print run just over twelve million is substantial for mid-nineteenth-century Netherlands, suggesting aggressive deployment into everyday commerce. Surviving examples in any honest condition are not common — these circulated hard.