| Mô tả mặt trước |
The obverse is printed entirely in green on a white ground, with a fine guilloche underprint covering the central and right portions of the note. At upper left, the circular Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe seal encloses a vignette of the Zimbabwe Bird, surrounded by the institution's name. The denomination numeral '100' appears in bold at each corner, while the central text panel carries the bearer cheque promise to pay, the denomination in words, the expiry date, issue date, and the 'BEARER CHEQUE' inscription. The Governor's facsimile signature with printed title appears beneath the seal at lower left. |
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| Mô tả mặt sau |
The reverse is printed in green on a white ground, with a sweeping guilloche band running vertically along the left side. The central vignette presents a detailed intaglio-style rendering of a rocky, terraced hill formation — characteristic of Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands landscape — occupying the majority of the note's face. The issuer's name appears in bold at the top, with the denomination numeral '100' at the upper left and lower right corners. |
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Zimbabwe's bearer cheques were not banknotes in any orthodox sense — they were a legal workaround introduced because the Reserve Bank lacked the foreign currency to commission conventional note printing from established security printers. By 2006, Gideon Gono was managing an economy with annual inflation already running into the hundreds of percent, and the bearer cheque series allowed the bank to issue quasi-currency domestically without the formalities of full note authorization.
The $100 denomination was obsolete almost immediately upon release. Within months, larger bearer cheque denominations were being rushed out to keep pace with hyperinflation accelerating toward its eventual peak.