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100 Bolívares

发行方 Banco Caracas
年份 1926-1928
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面值 100 Bolívares
货币 登录 以查看详情
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正面描述 Dark blue-black intaglio print on cream paper. At left, a classical allegorical vignette of a seated female figure with a dog, rendered in fine line engraving within an ornate frame. At upper centre, the bank title reads 'BANCO CARACAS' in bold lettering with 'COMPAÑIA ANONIMA' below, flanked by guilloche ornaments. At right, a circular portrait vignette of a woman in classical dress enclosed by lathe-work border. The promise-to-pay text in Spanish is centred, with denomination 'CIEN BOLIVARES' in large gothic script. Serial number and date appear at lower left, with manuscript signatures of bank officials below.
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背面描述 Printed in olive-brown on cream paper. A central allegorical vignette depicts a seated female figure representing Commerce or the Republic, surrounded by fine guilloche lathe-work and ornate geometric borderwork. At left, a large '100' numeral is set within an intricate oval guilloche panel, mirrored by a decorative diamond-shaped panel at right containing the denomination numerals. The circular legend 'BANCO CARACAS COMPAÑIA ANONIMA' and 'CAPITAL Bs 6.000.000' runs around the central vignette, with 'CIEN BOLIVARES' inscribed at top and bottom margins.
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Banco Caracas was a private commercial bank, not a central bank, and its authority to issue notes stemmed from a Venezuelan banking law that permitted chartered institutions to circulate currency well into the twentieth century. By the mid-1920s, that system was already under pressure — the Banco Central de Venezuela would eventually consolidate and terminate private note issue, though that came later, in 1940.

The American Bank Note Company imprint on a Venezuelan private bank note of this period is unsurprising; ABNC held a near-monopoly on South American commercial printing work throughout the 1920s. What makes this denomination worth noting is that 100 bolívares represented serious purchasing power in 1926–28 Venezuela, a country then being rapidly transformed by oil revenues from the Maracaibo fields — meaning notes like this circulated among a very specific commercial class, not the general population.

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