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100 Talonas 'Coupon'

发行方 Republic of Lithuania
年份 1992
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面值 100 Talonas
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正面描述 Grayish purple intaglio over a blue and red-orange guilloche underprint. The center is dominated by a large bold "100" numeral set against a fern-frond vignette, with the Coat of Arms of Lithuania — the Vytis, a mounted knight — positioned to the right. Issuing authority and counterfeit-warning inscriptions run along the upper and lower margins respectively.
正面铭文 LIETUVOS RESPUBLIKA TALONAS 100 1992 VERTYBINIS POPIERIUS. UŽ JO PADIRBINĖJIMĄ BAUDŽIAMA PAGAL ĮSTATYMĄ.
(Translation: Republic of Lithuania Talonas 100 1992 Security. Counterfeit is punished according to the Law.)
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The talonas was never intended as a permanent currency. Introduced in 1991 as a transitional rationing coupon to suppress Soviet-era ruble speculation and control access to goods, it evolved — awkwardly — into a functioning parallel currency before Lithuania restored the litas in 1993. This 100-talonas note sits in that uncomfortable middle period, when the instrument had outgrown its original purpose but the litas wasn't ready.

Printed by Spindulys in Kaunas, the state printing works, on a tight domestic production schedule with limited security infrastructure. The watermark is the note's primary anti-counterfeiting measure — a modest provision for what had become, by 1992, a serious transactional currency rather than a mere supplement.