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| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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| 裏面の銘文 | CAISSE CENTRALE DE LA FRANCE D'OUTRE-MER Ord. du 2 FEV. 1944 L'article 139 du Code Pénal punit des travaux forcés ceux qui auront contrefait ou falsifié les billets de Banques autorisées par la Loi ainsi que ceux qui auront fait usage de ces billets contrefaits ou falsifiés. (Translation: Central Fund of Overseas France / Order of 2 February 1944 / Article 139 of the Penal Code punishes with forced labor those who have counterfeited or falsified bank notes authorized by law, as well as those who have used these counterfeit or falsified banknotes.) |
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| 偽造防止技術 | Watermark |
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Edmund Dulac — better known as a book illustrator and postage stamp designer — was commissioned by the Free French authorities to produce the designs for the Caisse Centrale de la France d'Outre-Mer series during the war years, when normal French printing resources were unavailable. Bradbury Wilkinson engraved and printed the notes in London, as the CCFOM itself was a wartime creation, established in 1941 in London to handle currency for French territories liberated or held by the Free French.
This note circulated across a remarkably scattered range of territories — from the Antilles to Réunion to French Guiana — with the same printed sheet serving jurisdictions that had almost nothing in common economically.