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100 Gulden

Uitgever De Curaçaosche Bank
Jaar 1930
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Beschrijving voorzijde Green intaglio on red-green guilloche underprint. At left, a seated allegorical female figure holds a scroll and flag; a vignette of St. Eustatius harbour occupies the centre. Issuer and denomination legends are printed in black letterpress, with the printer's imprint below.
Opschrift voorzijde 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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Opmerkingen

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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