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Printed in black on white paper, the obverse bears a vignette of Minerva at top centre, set within an elaborate ornamental border with the denomination numeral 1000 repeated in each corner. The central text panel contains the bank's promise-to-pay inscription in Dutch, recording the place and date of issue, which varies across examples issued between 1 April 1859 and 3 January 1921. |
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| Mô tả mặt sau |
Printed entirely in red, the reverse is covered by a dense lathe-work guilloche underprint extending across the full surface. A large horizontal oval cartouche at centre encloses the denomination numeral 1000 in bold figures, flanked by symmetrical rosette guilloche medallions, with a small arc of text running above the central cartouche. |
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Pick 27 spans an unusually long issuing window — over five decades — yet the printing date of 30 April 1945 places this specific note at one of the most extraordinary moments in Dutch monetary history. That date is the day Adolf Hitler died in Berlin, and the Netherlands was still under German occupation, with liberation coming only days later in May. Notes printed at this stage were almost certainly never placed into normal circulation; the post-war monetary purge of September 1945, which required all banknotes to be registered and exchanged, effectively neutralized the entire circulating stock.
The 1000-gulden denomination made it an immediate target during that operation — high-value notes were scrutinized most aggressively for wartime black-market origins.