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10 Pesos Banco de Talca

Emittent Banco de Talca
Jahr 1885-1888
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Form Rectangular
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Black intaglio print on orange and green underprint; portrait vignette of a man in military uniform at left, a market scene at right, and a central vignette of Volcán Descabezado with altitude inscription. Issuer name across top; red five-digit serial numbers at upper left and right; face value in numerals at all four corners and in text along lower center and side panels. Two manuscript signature spaces with printed titles above; imprint of issuing location with manuscript date at lower center; printer's imprint at bottom.
Vorderseitenlegende 10
EL BANCO DE TALCA
00000
PAGARÁ Á LA VISTA AL PORTADOR
DIEZ
EL DESCABEZADO 3888 METROS
DIEZ PESOS
MONEDA CORRIENTE
TALCA _____DE 18__
SUPERINTENDENTE DE LA CASA DE MONEDA DIRECTOR GERENTE
Compañia Americana de Billetes de Banco Nueva York
(Translation: The Bank of Talca will pay on sight to the bearer ten pesos current currency.
Ten.
The Descabezado 3888 meters.
Talca, ___ 18__
Superintendent of the Mint. Manager Director.)
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Anmerkungen

The Banco de Talca was one of several regional Chilean banks authorized under the 1860 Ley de Bancos, which permitted private institutions to issue their own circulating notes backed by specie reserves. The American Bank Note Company in New York handled printing for numerous South American clients during this period, and the Talca commission was part of a broader pattern of Chilean provincial banks outsourcing their note production rather than relying on domestic facilities.

Talca's notes circulated primarily in the Maule region's agricultural economy, dominated by wheat and wine production. The Banco de Talca was eventually absorbed into the consolidation process that followed Chile's 1925 banking reforms, which extinguished all private note-issuing rights and centralized currency under the newly established Banco Central de Chile.