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1000 Cordobas

Issuer Banco Central de Nicaragua
Year 1962
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Size 150 × 65 mm
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Obverse lettering BANCO CENTRAL DE NICARAGUA SERIE A 1000 VALE POR UN MIL CORDOBAS RESOLUCION DEL CONSEJO DIRECTIVO DEL BANCO CENTRAL DE NICARAGUA DE 8 DE FEBRERO DE 1962. DECRETO EXECUTIVO Nº 71 DE 26 DE ABRIL DE 1962. AMERICAN BANK NOTE COMPANY
(Translation: Central Bank of Nicaragua Series A 1000 Worth One Thousand Cordobas Resolution of the Board of Directors of the Central Bank of Nicaragua of February 8, 1962. Executive Decree No. 71 of April 26, 1962. American Bank Note Company)
Reverse description Brown ink over a multicolour guilloche underprint. The central vignette carries an intaglio portrait of Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, the Spanish conquistador and eponym of the currency, executed in the fine-line engraving style characteristic of American Bank Note Company productions. The denomination and the issuing bank's name are inscribed in bold letterpress framing the central design.
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Comments

Nicaragua's córdoba issues of the early 1960s were produced during a period of relative monetary stability under the Somoza regime, when the Central Bank was consolidating its note series after years of transitional printing contracts. The American Bank Note Company held the concession throughout this era, and their work on the high-denomination 1,000 córdoba notes reflects the full engraved intaglio quality typical of ABNC's Latin American government contracts — deep impression, fine line work on the numerals and borders.

High-denomination notes of this series circulated in limited quantities and saw most use in commercial and interbank transactions rather than everyday retail. Survivors with honest wear are less common than the lower values.

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