目录
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| 正面铭文 | CIENTO. Nº El Banco Español Filipino Ps 100 Ps 100 Pagará al portador CIEN pesos MANILA. 1° Enero 1904. 1° Enero 1904. EL TENEDOR DE LIBROS EL CAJERO EL DIRECTOR (Translation: One Hundred. No. The Spanish-Filipino Bank will pay the bearer one hundred pesos. Manila. 1st January 1904. The Bookkeeper. The Cashier. The Director.) |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in olive-green on pale yellow paper, enclosed within a dense guilloche and arabesque border with numeral "100" roundels at each corner and rosette medallions at top and bottom centre. A large central vignette comprises an intricate lathe-work guilloche pattern with concentric geometric designs, flanked by scrolling acanthus foliage and smaller rosette counters. A horizontal cartouche across the centre of the vignette carries the denomination text "CIENTO 100 CIENTO" in bold letterpress. |
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El Banco Español Filipino was the oldest Western-style bank in the Philippines, and by 1904 it was operating in increasingly uncomfortable territory — American colonial administration had taken hold following the 1898 Treaty of Paris, and the bank's Spanish charter sat awkwardly under a new sovereign. This note was issued just two years before the institution was formally reconstituted as the Bank of the Philippine Islands in 1906, making the series among the last to carry the original Spanish-era name.
Barclay & Fry operated from Hackney in London and handled security printing for several colonial currency clients during this period, though they are less frequently cited than contemporaries like Bradbury Wilkinson or De La Rue.