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1000 Francs / 200 Ariary

Issuer Institut d'Émission Malgache
Year 1964-1970
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Printer Banque de France, France
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Reverse lettering FAMOAHAMBOLAN`NY REPOBLICA MALAGASY INSTITUT D`ÉMISSION MALGACHE LA LOI PUNIT DES TRAVAUX FORCÉS A PERPÉTUITÉ TOUT CONTREFACTEUR DE MONNAIE HELOHIN`NY LALANA HIASA AN-TERIVOZONA MANDRAPAHAFATINY NY MPANAO VOLA SONDOKA ROAN-JATO ARIARY
(Translation: Publication of Malagasy Republic Malagasy Emission Institute The law punishes with forced labor in perpetuity any counterfeiter of currency Two Hundred Ariary)
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Protection type Watermark
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The Institut d'Émission Malgache was Madagascar's transitional issuing authority, established after independence from France in 1960 but wound down once the Banque Nationale Malgache took over monetary functions in the early 1970s — meaning this entire series had a functional lifespan of roughly a decade before the institution itself ceased to exist. The 1000 Francs / 200 Ariary dual denomination reflects the 1961 introduction of the ariary as a parallel unit, with five francs equaling one ariary, a conversion ratio that caused persistent public confusion throughout the note's circulation life.

Pierrette Lambert was among a small cohort of female engravers working at the Banque de France atelier during this period — notable given how male-dominated the intaglio trade remained well into the late twentieth century.

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