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| 正面描述 | At centre-left, an intaglio portrait vignette of General Plutarco Elías Calles in military uniform is set against a fine guilloche underprint, with the main facade of the Banco de México building rendered in the architectural background. Denomination inscriptions and the issuing bank's obligation clause appear in letterpress along the upper and lower registers. The note's serial number, date, and other typeset elements frame the composition within the characteristic format of the high-denomination peso series. |
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| 正面铭文 | El Banco de México Pagará Cien mil pesos A la vista del portador (Translation: The Bank of Mexico Will pay One hundred thousand pesos Upon presentation, to the bearer) |
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By the time this denomination entered circulation, Mexico had lived through nearly a decade of peso collapse — the 1982 debt crisis had shattered confidence in the currency, and triple-digit inflation became the norm through most of the decade. A 100,000-peso note, unthinkable in 1970, was by the late 1980s barely sufficient for routine transactions.
The note was printed in-house by Banco de México, which had operated its own printing facility since the mid-twentieth century — one of relatively few central banks in Latin America to maintain full domestic production at this scale. J. Peral handled both the design and the obverse engraving, with S. Moreno responsible for the intaglio work on the reverse.
The entire series was rendered obsolete by the 1993 redenomination, which lopped three zeros off the currency and introduced the nuevo peso.