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| 背面描述 | Hungarian-language reverse printed in intaglio, mirroring the obverse allegorical composition with a seated female figure and child at left and a standing male figure at right. The large central denomination in Gothic script is surmounted by the Hungarian royal crown coat of arms at top center. Guilloche border work frames the face, with the denomination numeral 100 in the upper right corner. |
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| 防伪类型 | Watermark |
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The Oesterreichisch-ungarische Bank's 1902 100 Kronen was printed at the State Printing Office in Vienna — the same establishment that had produced Habsburg paper money continuously since the Napoleonic period. The Kronen series replaced the Gulden following the 1892 currency reform, and by the time this denomination entered circulation the dual monarchy's finances were stable enough that confidence in paper was no longer the obstacle it had been a generation earlier.
Notes of this type circulated through both the Austrian and Hungarian halves of the empire, with identical designs valid in both jurisdictions — a political balancing act that required careful negotiation between Vienna and Budapest each time the series was revised.