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100 Markkaa Kullassa / Mark i Guld / Marok' Zolotom' (Gold Mark)

Uitgever Suomen Pankki / Finlands Bank / Finlandskiy Bank'
Jaar 1909
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Referentie(s) P#22
Beschrijving voorzijde Log in om details te zien
Opschrift voorzijde SUOMEN PANKKI
MAKSAA TÄSTÄ SETELISTÄ
SATA MARKKAA
KULLASSA
FINLANDS BANK
INLÖSER DENNA SEDEL MED
ETTHUNDRA MARK
I GULD
100
Beschrijving keerzijde The reverse is printed in violet-brown and olive tones, centred on a detailed intaglio vignette of a wooden log church set within an ornate scalloped frame. Denomination panels showing '100' in circular guilloche rosettes appear at left and right. The bilingual bank name 'SUOMEN PANKKI' and 'FINLANDS BANK' is printed in the lower central area above a Finnish lion cartouche, with lengthy trilingual redemption text in Finnish and Swedish flanking the central vignette. A line of Cyrillic text reading 'ФИНЛЯНДСКIЙ БАНКЪ СТО МАРОКЪ ЗОЛОТОМЪ' runs along the very bottom of the note.
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Opmerkingen

Finland's monetary system in 1909 occupied an unusual position: the country was an autonomous Grand Duchy under Russian imperial rule, yet the Suomen Pankki operated its own currency backed by gold, independent of the Russian ruble. The trilingual title — Finnish, Swedish, and Russian — reflects that political arrangement exactly, satisfying Helsinki, the Swedish-speaking minority, and St. Petersburg simultaneously.

The "Kullassa / i Guld / Zolotom'" designation was not decorative. Finland maintained gold convertibility through this period, and the explicit gold clause carried legal weight under the monetary laws of 1877 and 1898.

The series was withdrawn and largely destroyed after Finnish independence in 1917, which accounts for the note's relative scarcity in any grade today.

MISSCHIEN OOK INTERESSANT