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100 Pesos 10 Condores

Emittent Banco Central de Chile
Jahr 1925
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Nennwert 100 Pesos = 10 Condores
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Brown on uncoloured paper. At left, a reclining allegorical female figure in classical dress reclines against a rock, rendered as an intaglio vignette within a fine guilloche border. The bank circular seal of the Banco Central de Chile appears at right. The denomination is expressed both in condores and pesos oro in large script lettering across the centre, with the date SANTIAGO, 10 DE DICIEMBRE DE 1925 below. The note is designated BILLETE PROVISIONAL at foot, with two manuscript signature lines for Presidente and Gerente General, and the imprint IMP. FISCAL – CHILE at the base.
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Rückseitenbeschreibung Brown. The reverse is dominated by a large five-pointed star vignette at centre, set within an intricate guilloche underprint of fine lathe-work. Two oval counters bearing the numeral 100 flank the central star at left and right, while four smaller ornamental rosette medallions occupy the corners. The legend REPUBLICA DE CHILE arches across the top, with CIEN PESOS in a straight legend at the foot.
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Anmerkungen

Chile's monetary system in 1925 was mid-transition. The peso had been the unit of account for decades, but the newly founded Banco Central — established by the Kemmerer Mission that same year — was simultaneously preparing to shift toward the condor as the primary denomination. This note straddles that change awkwardly, denominated in both units at a fixed rate of 10 pesos to the condor, a ratio that would soon make the dual labeling obsolete.

Printed domestically by Imprenta Fiscal rather than contracted abroad — unusual for Chilean notes of this period, which more commonly went to American Bank Note Company or Bradbury Wilkinson — the production quality reflects the limitations of local facilities in the mid-1920s.