The 1908 date puts this note at a pivotal moment: the Young Turk Revolution of that year forced the restoration of the Ottoman constitution, ending Abdülhamid II's autocratic suspension of parliament. The Imperial Ottoman Bank — a Franco-British joint institution chartered in 1863 and headquartered in Galata — continued issuing currency through the political upheaval, its operations underpinned by its dual role as state bank and private commercial enterprise.
Waterlow & Sons produced consistently high-quality intaglio work for colonial and semi-colonial banking clients throughout this period. The watermark security on this series was relatively modest by contemporary standards, reflecting the Bank's ongoing tension with Ottoman authorities over note issuance privileges.
The 1908 date puts this note at a pivotal moment: the Young Turk Revolution of that year forced the restoration of the Ottoman constitution, ending Abdülhamid II's autocratic suspension of parliament. The Imperial Ottoman Bank — a Franco-British joint institution chartered in 1863 and headquartered in Galata — continued issuing currency through the political upheaval, its operations underpinned by its dual role as state bank and private commercial enterprise.
Waterlow & Sons produced consistently high-quality intaglio work for colonial and semi-colonial banking clients throughout this period. The watermark security on this series was relatively modest by contemporary standards, reflecting the Bank's ongoing tension with Ottoman authorities over note issuance privileges.