目录
| 正面描述 | Central vignette comprises an intaglio portrait of Tomás Estrada Palma set within an oval frame, flanked by guilloche underprint in black and green. The red seal of the Banco Nacional de Cuba appears to the left of the portrait, with serial numbers printed in red. Inscriptions identify the subject and carry the full guarantee clause of the Banco Nacional de Cuba along the lower register. |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | 1000 1000 BANCO NACIONAL DE CUBA MIL PESOS 1000 PESOS TOMÁS ESTRADA PALMA GARANTIZADO INTEGRAMENTE CON EL ORO, CAMBIO EXTRANJERO CONVERTIBLE EN ORO Y TODOS LOS DEMÁS ACTIVOS DEL BANCO NACIONAL DE CUBA. ESTE BILLETE CONSTITUYE UNA OBLIGACIÓN DEL ESTADO CUBANO. (Translation: 1000 1000 National Bank of Cuba One thousand Pesos 1000 Pesos Tomás Estrada Palma Fully Guaranteed with the gold, foreign exchange. Convertible into gold and all the other assets of the National Bank of Cuba. This note constitutes an obligation of the Cuban State.) |
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| 备注 |
The Banco Nacional de Cuba was itself only established in 1948, making this 1950 issue among the earliest notes the institution produced. Cuba had previously relied on U.S. currency as legal tender following the dissolution of earlier banking arrangements, so the creation of a genuinely Cuban central bank — and the high-denomination notes that followed — carried real political weight for the Batista-era government.
At 1000 Pesos, this is the highest denomination in the series. ABNC produced relatively small print runs for this value, and attrition through the 1959 revolution and subsequent monetary reforms was severe. Post-revolutionary authorities withdrew and destroyed large quantities of Republican-era currency.