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10 Shillings Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London and China

Issuer Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London and China
Year 1867
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Currency Pound (1828-1869)
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Obverse lettering CEYLON BRANCH
රුපියල් පහයි
ரூபாய் ஐந்து
TEN
SHILLINGS
INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER
COLOMBO
THE CHARTERED MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA, LONDON & CHINA
Promises to pay the Bearer on demand
at its Branch in COLOMBO, in the Currency
of the Island TEN SHILLINGS, Value received.
By order of the Court of Directors,
Entd. ACCOUNTT. MANAGER
පවුඬ් බාගයයි அரைப் பவுண்ட்
(Translation: Five rupees. Half pound.)
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Variants Specimen
Comments

The Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London and China — incorporated by Royal Charter in 1857 — operated across a string of Asian ports at a moment when sterling-denominated exchange banking was genuinely profitable and largely unregulated. A 10 Shilling denomination is an odd choice for an institution whose core business ran in hundreds and thousands of pounds across foreign exchange markets; fractional notes of this type were almost certainly intended for local payroll or petty commercial use at one of the bank's branches rather than for interbank settlement.

Perkins, Bacon & Petch were the dominant security printers in Britain through much of the nineteenth century, responsible for stamps and banknotes across the empire. Their steel-intaglio work was chosen precisely because counterfeiting was a serious operational risk in treaty-port Asia.

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