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100 Gulden

Issuer De Curaçaosche Bank
Year 1930
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Value 100 Gulden (100 ANG)
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Obverse lettering DE CURAÇAOSCHE BANK BETAALT AAN TOONDER HONDERD GULDEN JOH. ENSCHEDÉ EN ZONEN
(Translation: The Curaçao Bank pay to Bearer One Hundred Gulden Joh. Enschedé and Sons)
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Reverse lettering CURAÇAO 1930 100
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Comments

De Curaçaosche Bank was the sole currency-issuing authority for the Dutch West Indies throughout the interwar period, operating under a concession from the colonial government in Willemstad. Enschedé in Haarlem had printed its notes since the bank's founding, and by 1930 the relationship was long-established — the security printing quality reflects that continuity, not innovation.

The 100 Gulden denomination served a commercial economy built around oil refining; the Shell refinery at Willemstad had transformed Curaçao's economic scale dramatically through the 1920s, making high-denomination paper currency a practical necessity rather than an occasional luxury.

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