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| 背面描述 | Uniformly printed in olive-yellow intaglio, the reverse centres on an elaborate scrollwork vignette enclosing the Philippine coat of arms within an oval cartouche, flanked by palm fronds and decorative ribbon banners carrying the denomination '100 PESOS' on each side. A finely engraved guilloche border frames the entire design, with 'PHILIPPINES' arched at the top. The bold black letterpress overprint 'VICTORY' is applied diagonally across the full width of the note. |
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| 变体 | P#100a - signature title at right: "Auditor General" P#100b - signature title at right: "Treasurer" signatures: Sergio Osmeña & M. Guevara P#100c - signature title at right: "Treasurer" signatures: Manuel Roxas & M. Guevara |
| 备注 |
The Victory series was printed in Washington ahead of the planned liberation of the Philippines, held in reserve in the United States until MacArthur's forces returned in late 1944 and early 1945. The overprinted word "VICTORY" was a deliberate political signal — the Commonwealth government in exile needed to establish its currency as distinct from the Japanese Military Administration peso, which had been flooding the islands since 1942 and was widely despised as "Mickey Mouse money."
Two signature combinations exist for this denomination, reflecting the political transition: Osmeña assumed the Commonwealth presidency after Quezon's death in August 1944, while Roxas later became the first president of the independent republic in 1946.