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100 Gulden

Issuer De Nederlandsche Bank
Year 1930-1944
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Printer Royal Joh. Enschedé (Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé, Johan Enschede en Zonen), Haarlem, Netherlands (1703-date)
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Reverse description Multicolour reverse with elaborate geometric and guilloche designs filling the field. The issue date is printed at bottom centre or at upper left and lower right, with dates ranging between 1 October 1930 and 30 March 1944. The anti-counterfeiting legal warning text from the Dutch Criminal Code occupies a central panel.
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Protection type Watermark
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Comments

The signature pairing of Robertson and Meinoud Rost van Toningen on the 1941 and 1942 dates is the detail that separates a routine high-denomination note from a politically charged one. Rost van Toningen was an ardent Dutch National Socialist appointed to De Nederlandsche Bank under German occupation, and his name on circulating currency was a deliberate assertion of collaborationist authority over the Dutch financial system.

The shift in signature placement between the April 1941 and January 1942 dates — center-back to upper-left and lower-right — reflects a discrete layout revision mid-run, not a new plate. Lion Cachet's design had been in continuous production at Enschedé since 1930 without fundamental change.

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