目录
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed on polymer substrate in predominantly pink and red tones, with a multicolour underprint incorporating a stylised floral motif at upper centre. The central vignette presents a full-length figure of a female dancer in traditional Tari Anyer costume with outstretched arms, set against a scenic panorama of the Raja Ampat island landscape. At upper right the 'BANK INDONESIA' legend appears, with the denomination '100000' in large red numerals at lower right and the serial number block at lower left. The legal tender clause and 'SERATUS RIBU RUPIAH' inscription run along the lower margin. |
| 背面铭文 | BANK INDONESIA 100000 SERATUS RIBU RUPIAH DENGAN RAHMAT TUHAN YANG MAHA ESA, NEGARA KESATUAN REPUBLIK INDONESIA MENGELUARKAN RUPIAH SEBAGAI ALAT PEMBAYARAN YANG SAH DENGAN NILAI Tari Anyer |
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Indonesia's shift to polymer for the 100.000 Rupiah denomination reflects a decision made under sustained pressure from counterfeiting — earlier cotton-paper issues of the same denomination were among the most frequently forged in circulation. The domestic printing attribution is significant: Perum Peruri, the state security printer, has produced polymer notes in-house since the mid-2010s, one of relatively few government-owned facilities in Southeast Asia capable of doing so on polymer substrate.
The transparent window integrated into the polymer substrate functions as a primary authentication point rather than a supplementary one — a deliberate inversion of how security features are typically prioritized on paper issues.