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| 正面铭文 | Bank of Ireland I Promise to pay the bearer on demand Ten Pounds For the Governor and Company of the Bank of Ireland |
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| 背面铭文 | TEN POUNDS |
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Bank of Ireland's pre-consolidation sterling notes occupied an awkward position in the Irish monetary system. Following the Currency Act of 1927, the Irish Free State established the Currency Commission to regulate paper money issuance, and the associated banks — including Bank of Ireland — continued issuing their own notes under strict commission oversight, fully backed and pegged at parity with sterling. The ten pound denomination was a high-value instrument in this period; ten pounds represented roughly two weeks' wages for a skilled tradesman.
The 1929–1943 dating span reflects the full period of the Consolidated Bank Note series, which ended when the Currency Commission was superseded by the newly established Central Bank of Ireland in 1943.