The Banque de Syrie et du Liban was itself a casualty of the political turbulences it operated within — Syria nationalized the bank in 1956, effectively ending its dual mandate, while Lebanon retained it as the sole central bank until the Banque du Liban replaced it in 1964. This note spans exactly that terminal period: issued after Syria's departure, redeemed when Lebanon finally established its own institution.
Thomas De La Rue held the printing contract throughout the bank's Lebanese final chapter. The relatively long issue window — seven years — means date varieties exist within the series, and some collectors treat them as distinct acquisitions.
The Banque de Syrie et du Liban was itself a casualty of the political turbulences it operated within — Syria nationalized the bank in 1956, effectively ending its dual mandate, while Lebanon retained it as the sole central bank until the Banque du Liban replaced it in 1964. This note spans exactly that terminal period: issued after Syria's departure, redeemed when Lebanon finally established its own institution.
Thomas De La Rue held the printing contract throughout the bank's Lebanese final chapter. The relatively long issue window — seven years — means date varieties exist within the series, and some collectors treat them as distinct acquisitions.