目录
| 正面描述 | The obverse is dominated by a central guilloché rosette vignette in blue and violet tones, with the denomination numeral "100" printed in each corner. The Syrian national arms — an eagle with a shield bearing two green stars — appears in an hexagonal frame at the right. Arabic inscriptions name the issuing bank and denomination, with two manuscript signatures across the lower centre. |
|---|---|
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| 背面铭文 | BANQUE CENTRALE DE SYRIE CENT LIVRES SYRIENNES 100 LIVRES |
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| 备注 |
This note appeared during a peculiar window in Syrian monetary history: 1958 was the year Syria merged with Egypt to form the United Arab Republic, an arrangement that lasted only until 1961. The Banque Centrale de Syrie continued issuing notes under its own name through the union's early period rather than immediately adopting a joint currency authority, reflecting how incomplete the economic integration actually was in practice.
Bradbury, Wilkinson's engraved intaglio work for Syrian issues of this period is among the finer commercial printing produced for Middle Eastern central banks in the 1950s.