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| 表面の銘文 | 1000 BIGLIETTO GIA` CONSORZIALE A CORSO FORZOSO INCONVERTIBILE VALE MILLE LIRE LEGGE 25 DICEMBRE 1881. IL CASSIERE SPECIALE IL DELEGATO DELLA CORTE DEI CONTI La legge punisce i fabbricatori di biglietti falsi, chi li introduce e li usa nel Regno e chi, avendoli ricevuti per veri, li rimette in circolazione dopo conosciutane la falsità. (Translation: 1000 ALREADY CONSORTIUM TICKET FORCED TENDER INCONVERTIBLE IT'S WORTH ONE THOUSAND LIRE LAW 25 DECEMBER 1881 THE SPECIAL CASHIER THE DELEGATE OF THE COURT OF AUDITORS The law punishes the makers of counterfeit banknotes, those who introduce and use them in the Kingdom and those who, having received them as genuine, put them back into circulation after having discovered their falsity.) |
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| 偽造防止技術 | Watermark |
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The Ministero delle Finanze issued these notes directly — not through the Banca d'Italia, which would not be formally established until 1893. Italy in 1882 was still operating under a fragmented banking structure, with several regional banks retaining note-issuing rights simultaneously. A 1000 Lire denomination at this date was not a note ordinary Italians handled; it was a commercial and institutional instrument, moving between banks and treasury accounts rather than through daily trade.
The Officina Carte Valori at San Teodoro in Rome was the state's own security printing facility, brought into service precisely to reduce dependence on foreign printers for high-value paper.