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100 Colones

Issuer Banco Nacional de Costa Rica
Year 1942
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In circulation to Yes
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Obverse description Log in to see details
Obverse lettering 100 C
BANCO NACIONAL DE COSTA RICA
DEPARTAMENTO EMISOR
SAN JOSÉ, COSTA RICA
3 de Junio de 1942
ACUERDO DEL CONSEJO DIRECTIVO № 7
VASO POLÍCRONO DE LA CULTURA CHOROTEGA EL DIOS MONO
CIEN COLONES
EL PRESIDENTE DE LA JUNTA DIRECTIVA GENERAL
EL GERENTE GENERAL DEL BANCO
WATERLOW & SONS LIMITED, LONDRES.
(Translation: National Bank of Costa Rica. Issuing department. San José, Costa Rica, June 3, 1942. Agreement of the Board of Directors no. 7. Polychrome vessel of the Chorotega culture - The Monkey God. One hundred colones. The President of the General Board of Directors. The General Manager of the Bank. Waterlow & Sons Limited, London.)
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Reverse lettering 100 C
BANCO NACIONAL DE COSTA RICA
DEPARTAMENTO EMISOR
100 CIEN
ALTAR CEREMONIAL DE LA CULTURA GÜETAR-
EL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA Y SUS ATRIBUTOS.
CIEN COLONES
WATERLOW & SONS LIMITED, LONDRES.
(Translation: National Bank of Costa Rica. Issuing department. Ceremonial altar of the Güetar culture - the Rain God and his attributes. One hundred colones. Waterlow & Sons Limited, London.)
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Comments

Waterlow & Sons held the Costa Rican printing contract through much of the mid-twentieth century, and the P#208 series reflects that continuity — same London firm, same intaglio-heavy production approach used across their Latin American commissions of the period. The 100 Colones was a high-value denomination relative to everyday wages in 1942 Costa Rica, which means circulation wear on surviving examples tends to be light; these notes passed through institutional hands more than commercial ones.

Costa Rica remained officially neutral through most of the Second World War, but the conflict still disrupted supply chains for imported printed goods. The 1942 date puts this issue close to the period when such arrangements with British printers became logistically complicated.

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