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| 背面描述 | Bright red on brown underprint, with a central vignette of a Finnish church rendered in black. Large guilloche-framed numeral '100' appears on either side of the central motif. Finnish and Swedish institutional text is carried in the upper border, Russian text in the lower border, with additional small-format legal text panels in Finnish on the left and Swedish on the right. |
| 背面铭文 | SUOMEN PANKKI FINLANDS BANK ФИНЛЯНСКЙ БАНК СТО МАРОКЪ ЗОЛОТОМЪ LAKI SUOMEN SUURIRUHTINAANMAAN RAHASTA ANNETTU HELSINGISSÄ 9P:NÄ ELOKUUTA 1877. 1§ SUOMENMAAN RAHALAITOKSEN KANTANA ON KULTA AINOANA ARVONMITTANA. (Translation: [Top] Bank of Finland, in Finnish and in Swedish. [Bottom in Russian] Bank of Finland One Hundred Marks in Gold [Small lettering on either side] The law on the Grand Duchy of Finland's money enacted in Helsinki on 9th of August 1877. 1§ The Finnish department of finance determines gold as the only standard of value) |
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This note was printed in 1909 but only entered circulation in 1918 under the designation Sarja II — the Finnish Civil War had created an urgent need to mobilize reserves that had sat unissued for nearly a decade. The White government's grip on the Bank of Finland meant these older stocks were released as legitimate tender while the Reds issued competing currency from territories they controlled, producing one of the stranger dual-circulation episodes in Nordic monetary history.
Notes that spent years in vault storage before sudden wartime release tend to show paradoxical condition: clean paper with sharp folds from hasty counting rather than gradual wear.