The Union Bank of Burma was established in 1952 as part of the post-independence restructuring of the country's monetary institutions following separation from India and the dissolution of the Reserve Bank of India's authority over Burmese currency. This 100 Kyats note, printed by Thomas De La Rue in London, belongs to the early series issued under that new framework — Burma's first fully sovereign emission series.
De La Rue's involvement was typical of the period; newly independent states across Asia and Africa routinely contracted London security printers while domestic production capacity was still being established. Burma would not develop meaningful local printing infrastructure for banknotes until considerably later.
The Union Bank of Burma was established in 1952 as part of the post-independence restructuring of the country's monetary institutions following separation from India and the dissolution of the Reserve Bank of India's authority over Burmese currency. This 100 Kyats note, printed by Thomas De La Rue in London, belongs to the early series issued under that new framework — Burma's first fully sovereign emission series.
De La Rue's involvement was typical of the period; newly independent states across Asia and Africa routinely contracted London security printers while domestic production capacity was still being established. Burma would not develop meaningful local printing infrastructure for banknotes until considerably later.