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10 Yen

Issuer Japanese Imperial Government (Military Currency)
Year 1938
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Size 140 × 80 mm
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Obverse description Black intaglio on green and brown guilloche underprint, with bold red letterpress overprint in Chinese characters applied across the base design. At right, an intaglio portrait vignette presents a bearded court noble in traditional Heian-period ceremonial dress; at centre-left, an ornate floral rosette medallion bears the numeral '10'. The Imperial chrysanthemum seal appears at top centre, with vertical Japanese text '日本銀行' and the red overprint legend '大日本帝国政府軍用手票' running along the lower margin.
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Reverse lettering
軍用手票
日満親善勉励
10 YEN
此票一到即換正面所開
日本通貨
如有偽造繕造仿造或知情行使者均應重罰不貸
10 10
10 10
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Comments

Japanese military yen were issued as occupation currency during the Second Sino-Japanese War — functionally convertible with regular yen at par, but deliberately separated from the domestic monetary system to prevent inflationary pressure from flowing back into Japan proper. In practice, the separation was imperfect, and military yen circulated alongside Bank of Japan notes in occupied territories with little distinction made at street level.

The M26 series was printed by the Cabinet Printing Bureau in Tokyo, the same facility responsible for civilian government securities. That institutional continuity is part of why these notes often get misattributed as standard Bank of Japan issues by less experienced collectors.

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