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10 Pounds

Issuer Sudan Currency Board
Year 1956
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Currency First pound (1956-1992)
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Obverse lettering الجمهورية السودانية
لجنة العملة السودانية
عشرة جنيهات سودانية
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Protection description Watermark area visible as an unprinted rosette medallion on both obverse and reverse
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Comments

Sudan's Currency Board was a transitional institution, established at independence in 1956 to replace the Egyptian pound with a Sudanese currency — this note belongs to the very first series issued by a sovereign Sudanese monetary authority. The board itself was short-lived; the Bank of Sudan took over issuance in 1960, making the Currency Board series a narrow window of just a few years.

Thomas De La Rue printed the series in London, as they did for a substantial number of newly independent African and Middle Eastern states in this period. The P#5 is the highest denomination in the inaugural set, which inevitably means it saw less day-to-day handling — but surviving examples still tend to show fold wear consistent with hoarding rather than active use.