目录
| 正面描述 | Central text block in letterpress with the denomination TIO (10) Riksdaler Banco, flanked by the value 15 Riksdaler Riksgäld. A reclining lion beneath the Swedish lesser coat of arms appears at the top. The face bears a lengthy anti-counterfeiting warning in Swedish. |
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| 正面铭文 | Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank inlöser vid anfordran denna Sedel å RDR 15 RDG Riksdr TIO Banco RDR 15 RDG med 3¾ Riksdaler Silfver Specie, enligt 1830 Års Mynt-fot. Stockholm den 28de Januari 1855 10 Den som denna Sedel efterapar eller förfalskar skall warda hängd. Men den som upptäcker Efteraparen, Förfalskaren eller Utprånglaren undfår belöning enligt Kongl. Kungörelsen af den 7 Julii 1818. (Translation: Sweden's Estates of the Realm Bank will pay, on demand, for this note 10 Riksdaler Banco with 3¾ Riksdaler in silver specie according to the Year 1830 coinage standard. Those who mimic or forge this note shall be hanged. However, those who discover mimics, forgers or distributors will receive reward according to the royal proclamation of the 7th of July 1818.) |
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Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank — the Riksdag's own bank, predecessor to the Riksbank — issued this note during a period when Sweden ran two parallel currency systems simultaneously. The Riksdaler Banco, backed by silver deposits, traded at a persistent premium over the Riksdaler Riksgälds, the inconvertible paper currency issued since 1789. The dual denomination printed on this note is not a misprint or overprint; it reflects the legally fixed exchange rate of 3:2, mandated so that a single note could function in both accounting systems.
Sweden did not resolve this currency duality until the 1855 monetary reform, which unified the two systems and eventually paved the way for decimalization in 1858.