Catalog
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| Issuer | Thesouro Nacional (National Treasury of Brazil) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1897 |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Printer | American Bank Note Company, New York, United States |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | REPÚBLICA DOS ESTADOS UNIDOS DO BRAZIL 100 NO THESOURO FEDERAL SE PAGARÁ AO PORTADOR DESTA A QUANTIA DE AMOSTRA 100 CEM MIL RÉIS VALOR RECEBIDO CEM MIL RÉIS AMERICAN BANK NOTE CO., NEW YORK (Translation: Republic of the United States of Brazil At the Federal Treasury the holder will be paid the amount of AMOSTRA One Hundred Thousand Reis Amount received One Hundred Thousand Reis American Bank Note Co., New York) |
| Reverse description | Intaglio print in black on polychrome underprint. The central vignette presents an equestrian statue of Marshal Manuel Luís Osório (1808–1879), the celebrated Brazilian military hero, corresponding to the monument now situated at Praça XV in Rio de Janeiro. Denomination numerals appear at each corner. |
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| Comments |
Brazil's Thesouro Nacional relied heavily on American Bank Note Company throughout the late imperial and early republican decades, and this 1897 issue falls squarely within that dependency. The designation "7th Print" signals that the underlying plate design had already seen six prior production runs — a common cost-saving measure that also complicates precise attribution, since successive printings could vary in paper stock, ink saturation, and serial numeral style without constituting a formally distinct type.
The mil réis system itself was already under strain by 1897. Brazil had passed through the Encilhamento speculation crisis of the early 1890s, and the currency was badly depreciated. Notes of this denomination entered circulation into an economy still digesting that damage.