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100 Pesos

Issuer Banco Central de Cuba
Year 2001
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Obverse lettering BANCO CENTRAL DE CUBA
CIEN PESOS
AÑO 2001
PRESIDENTE DEL BANCO
CARLOS MANUEL DE CÉSPEDES
(Translation: Central Bank of Cuba / One Hundred Pesos / Year 2001 / President of the Bank / Carlos Manuel de Céspedes)
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Reverse lettering REPÚBLICA DE CUBA
100
TRIBUNA ANTIMPERIALISTA "JOSE MARTI"
CIUDAD DE LA HABANA
(Translation: Republic of Cuba / 100 / Anti-Imperialist Tribune "José Martí" / City of Havana)
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Comments

Cuba's Series 2001 banknotes were printed by the Canadian Bank Note Company — a contract that raised eyebrows given the U.S. embargo's reach into financial infrastructure, but Canada was never party to those restrictions. The 100 Peso denomination circulated at a time when the Cuban Peso was effectively a parallel currency to the Convertible Peso (CUC), and ordinary Cubans were paid in these while hard currency transactions ran through a separate system entirely. A single note represented roughly a month's state salary.

P#124 shares its watermark placement and thread specification with the broader Cuban series of this period — nothing anomalous about the security package, but the CBN printing relationship persisted well into the 2000s.