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1000 Baht 'Ploughing Ceremony' Trial Specimen

Uitgever Government of Siam
Jaar 1930
Type Pattern or trial banknote
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Beschrijving voorzijde Brown intaglio print on a yellow-cream underprint, centred on a large radiating guilloche starburst pattern with the Thai denomination 'พันบาท' (One Thousand Baht) in an ornate cartouche at centre. A Garuda vignette appears at upper left, with denomination numerals '1000' in decorative panels at upper right and lower left, a Siamese state elephant vignette at lower right, and a manuscript-style signature of the Minister of Finance above the imprint line. The date '1st October 1930' is printed in English and Thai script, with serial number panels flanking the central device.
Opschrift voorzijde ๑๐๐๐ รัฐบาลสยาม ธนบัตร์เป็นเงินที่ชำระหนี้ได้ตามกฎหมาย พันบาท 1000 เสนาบดีกระทรวงพระคลัง THOMAS DE LA RUE & COMPANY LIMITED, LONDON.
(Translation: 1000 Government of Siam Banknote is legal tender [One] Thousand Baht 1000 Minister of Finance)
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Opmerkingen

This trial specimen was prepared by De La Rue ahead of what became a significant transition in Siamese currency production — the country had relied heavily on foreign-printed notes since the introduction of modern paper money under Rama V, and the 1930 series represented one of the last major commissions placed before the political upheaval of the 1932 revolution that ended the absolute monarchy. Whether this specific design was ever formally approved for general issue is a reasonable question; trial specimens of this era frequently document rejected or modified designs rather than confirmed production runs.

Specimen notes from De La Rue's Siamese work of this period are rarely encountered outside institutional collections.

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