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100 Roubles Perm

Issuer Perm City Society (Пермское Городское Общество)
Year 1917
Type Local banknote
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Obverse description Pale olive-yellow on cream paper, the centre occupied by an oval vignette within a laurel wreath bearing the Perm civic arms — a bear passant above a fortification — set against elaborate scrolling foliate ornament. The denomination numeral '100' appears in plain circles at the left and right margins. Below the vignette, a two-line Cyrillic obligation clause provides manuscript spaces for the sum and for the countersignatures of the Городской Голова, Бухгалтер, and Член Управы, all acting по уполномочию Пермской Думы.
Obverse lettering КРАТКОСРОЧНОЕ ОБЯЗАТЕЛЬСТВО ПЕРМСКОГО ГОРОДСКОГО ОБЩЕСТВА
Пермское Городское Общество обязуется уплатить предъявителю сего
каковая сумма от него получена сполна.
Городской Голова
Бухгалтер
По уполномочию Пермской Думы:
Член Управы
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Comments

The Perm City Society was one of dozens of municipal and cooperative bodies across the collapsing Russian Empire that issued their own scrip in 1917 as the central supply of Romanov-era and Provisional Government banknotes dried up. These local obligations — often called "bonovy" or simply city money — filled an immediate vacuum in small-denomination exchange, but their legal standing was perpetually ambiguous and their acceptance rarely extended beyond the issuing district.

Perm fell to Kolchak's White forces in December 1918 and was recaptured by the Red Army in July 1919, a back-and-forth that destroyed most locally issued paper. Surviving examples of this note are correspondingly scarce.

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