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2 Mil Réis Thesouro Nacional, 8th print

Emittent Thesouro Nacional
Jahr 1888
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Nennwert 2000 Réis
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Printed in black on sepia underprint, combining intaglio (chalcography) and lithographic techniques. A vignette of the Praça XV de Novembro in Rio de Janeiro, with the Church of the Ordem Terceira do Carmo visible in the background, occupies the right portion of the note, while a portrait bust of Emperor D. Pedro II appears to the left, with the Arms of the Empire positioned below. Serial numbers and control stamp are printed in black, with the banknote number rendered in red.
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Rückseitenbeschreibung Printed in black and blue by intaglio (calcografia). The central panel presents a scenic vignette of the former Rua Direita — now known as Rua 1º de Março — in the city of Rio de Janeiro, with the Church of the Ordem Terceira do Carmo rising in the background. The composition is framed by ornamental borders with denomination numerals flanking the central scene.
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Anmerkungen

Brazil's Thesouro Nacional (National Treasury) notes of the late Imperial period were issued under a monetary system already under severe strain — coffee export revenues were volatile, abolition of slavery in May 1888 had reshaped the labor economy almost overnight, and the monarchy itself had less than two years left. The 8th print designation within the P#A260 series reflects iterative reissues through a prolonged period rather than a single authorised run, a common workaround when demand outpaced formal legislative budget cycles.

ABNC's New York engravers supplied the plates for the full Thesouro Nacional series; the same firm handled much of Latin America's government printing through this period, which occasionally makes attribution tricky when designs were shared or slightly modified across republics. Within months of this note's issue date, the Proclamation of the Republic rendered the Imperial treasury apparatus defunct.

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