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| 表面の説明 | Red official government seal at left, with a dragon vignette at right, all set within a guilloche border. Block numbers appear at upper left and lower right. Inscriptions in kanji characters run across the face. |
|---|---|
| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 裏面の説明 | Printed in brown on cream paper with an overall guilloche underprint. Large kanji characters for 'ten sen' (拾銭) occupy a lobed cartouche at left, flanked by the numeral '10 SEN' at upper right and repeated in larger type at bottom center. A central panel carries the exchange and anti-counterfeiting text in vertical Chinese script columns. |
| 裏面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 署名 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 偽造防止技術 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 偽造防止の説明 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| バリエーション | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| コメント |
Japan's military occupation currency for China was issued through a deliberate bureaucratic fiction: the notes bore no explicit Japanese attribution on their face, a calculated move to normalize their use among a Chinese population that had just watched its own currency system be systematically destabilized. The Central Reserve Bank and Federal Reserve Bank puppet structures came later — this 1939 series preceded those institutions and circulated directly under military authority during the early consolidation of occupied territory.
The Cabinet Printing Bureau, which also produced domestic Japanese government securities and postage, handled production. Smallest denomination in the M series, and the one most likely to have actually changed hands in daily transactions.