| Descripción del anverso |
At right, an intaglio portrait vignette of Prince Pribina facing right, set within a circular medallion with his name inscribed in the border, flanked by a small church vignette below. The centre carries the denomination STO KORÚN SLOVENSKÝCH in large letterpress text, with the issuing authority SLOVENSKÁ NÁRODNÁ BANKA V BRATISLAVE and two manuscript signatures of the Governor and Cashier below. A large blank oval watermark area occupies the left field, surrounded by fine guilloche underprint in blue and green tones. |
| Leyenda del anverso |
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| Descripción del reverso |
At left, a seated allegorical female figure rendered in intaglio, holding a sword and a shield bearing the Slovak double cross, set against a landscape background with a sunburst motif above. The central panel carries the denomination 100 STO KORÚN SLOVENSKÝCH in bold text, with multilingual equivalents below: HUNDERT KS, CTO KS, and SZÁZ KS. A blank oval reserve occupies the right field, framed by intricate guilloche borders throughout. |
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| Descripción de la protección |
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Slovakia's First Republic issued this note during a period when the young state's financial infrastructure was still being assembled under German patronage — the choice of Giesecke & Devrient in Leipzig was not incidental. Most Slovak paper currency of this period was produced in Germany, reflecting the political and economic dependencies of the Tiso regime rather than any shortage of printing capacity elsewhere.
Štefan Bednár was among the few Slovak graphic artists working at a professional level on state commissions during this period. His involvement here places the design within a small, traceable body of wartime Slovak numismatic work.