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100 Francs

Uitgever Bank in Basel
Jaar 1889-1905
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Beschrijving keerzijde The uniformly blue-printed reverse is dominated by three large circular guilloche medallions, each enclosing a globe vignette, arranged horizontally across the note. The denomination rendered in all three Swiss national languages — CENT FRANCS, HUNDERT FRANKEN, and CENTO FRANCHI — is printed in bold letterpress across the centre. Corner cartouches and a continuous micro-text border repeat the numeral 100 throughout the peripheral design.
Opschrift keerzijde 100 100 CENT FRANCS HUNDERT FRANKEN CENTO FRANCHI 100 100
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Opmerkingen

The "Bank in Basel" — formally the Bankverein in Basel — was one of several Swiss cantonal and private institutions that issued their own banknotes before the Swiss National Bank gained its monopoly in 1907. This 100 Francs note falls squarely in the transitional years when private issuance was still legal but increasingly contested, with the federal government pushing hard for centralization throughout the 1890s.

Bradbury Wilkinson's involvement is noteworthy — the New Malden firm was by this period the preferred security printer for numerous smaller European and colonial issuers who lacked the volume to justify domestic printing arrangements. The Basel bank's choice to contract London rather than a Swiss or German printer was a practical one, not a political statement.

Pick S147 is a scarcer entry; the series had a short effective window before federal reform ended private issue entirely.