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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | Red and gold print on white paper, with the central vignette occupied by the Chilean State seal rendered in the lower center, showing an Andean condor with wings spread facing left. Guilloche underprint patterns fill the background field, with denomination numerals and bank name inscriptions distributed across the design. |
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| 防伪描述 | Silhouette portrait of Diego Portales. |
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| 备注 |
Chile's dual-denomination system — where the Condor circulated as a unit equal to 10 Pesos — was a relic of the 1925 monetary reform and was already an anachronism by the late 1950s. The Banco Central continued printing notes denominated in both units simultaneously, a cumbersome convention that persisted until the 1960 introduction of the Escudo effectively swept the entire Peso/Condor framework away.
Printed domestically by the Casa de Moneda in Santiago rather than contracted abroad, as earlier high-value Chilean issues often were. The 1958–1959 window was narrow; this series had a short active life before inflationary pressure made the 100 Peso denomination functionally inadequate for everyday transactions.