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10 Silver Yen

发行方 Nippon Ginko / Bank of Japan
年份 1890
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参考资料 P#28
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正面铭文 登录 以查看详情
背面描述 The reverse is printed in golden-orange on cream paper with a rectilinear guilloche frame enclosing the bilingual promise-to-pay text in English script. A decorative cartouche at upper left carries the numeral '10', while two official Japanese seals appear in the lower right area of the field.
背面铭文 NIPPON GINKO
Promises to Pay the
Bearer on Demand
Ten Yen in Silver
金債拾圓
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The Concord Bank Note Company of Boston printed this issue, one of very few foreign-produced Japanese government notes from the Meiji period. Japan was still building its domestic printing infrastructure in 1890, and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing facility that would eventually handle most BOJ production wasn't yet capable of handling the full output demands. Concord's involvement was short-lived — the relationship didn't extend far into the following decade.

The "Silver" designation matters: convertibility into silver coin was a live guarantee at time of issue, not decorative wording. Japan remained on a silver standard until 1897, when the Sino-Japanese War indemnity — paid in silver by China — gave Tokyo enough metal to shift to gold.