| Opis awersu |
Central vignette of Svea, the allegorical female personification of Sweden, standing in full figure within a circular medallion, holding the Swedish coat of arms shield bearing three crowns, flanked by decorative floral and wheat sprays. The denomination ETT TUSEN KRONOR appears on a ribbon cartouche below the medallion, with numeral 1000 in dark panels at lower left and right. Two signatures appear beneath the central vignette, with the date and serial number printed at left and upper right. |
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Central medallion with an intaglio portrait of King Gustav V in left-facing profile, set within a circular guilloche frame surmounted by a royal crown. The surrounding cartouche is richly patterned with repeated crown motifs, and a ribbon scroll below the portrait bears the Latin motto Hinc robur et securitas. The numeral 1000 appears in each of the four corners against a lightly tinted background. |
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The P#46 series was Sweden's highest circulating denomination for most of its print run, which made it a natural target for the sophisticated counterfeit operations that plagued Scandinavian central banks in the postwar decades. Sveriges Riksbank responded by rotating signature combinations across the issue years — at least four distinct signature pairings appear across the 1952–1973 span, making date and signature matching critical for accurate cataloging.
Notes from the final years of this series were withdrawn relatively quickly after the 1973–1974 redesign program began. Lightly circulated survivors from the early 1950s printings are considerably scarcer than the later dates suggest.