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20 Korún Provisional Note

Issuer Národná banka Slovenska (National Bank of Slovakia)
Year 1993
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Reverse description The reverse retains the original Czechoslovak intaglio design, with a Glagolitic alphabet inscription at left, a central vignette of the Tree of Life rising from an open book, and a young couple at right, all executed in the characteristic illustrative engraving style of Albín Brunovský.
Reverse lettering BANKOVKY JSOU KRYTY ZLATEM A OSTATNIMI AKTIVY STATNI BANKY CESKOSLOVENSKE A. BRUNOVSKÝ DEL. STÁTNÍ TISKÁRNA CENIN, PRAHA V. FAJT SC.
(Translation: Banknotes are Backed with Gold and other Assets of the State Bank of Czechoslovakia)
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When Czechoslovakia dissolved on 1 January 1993, Slovakia had no currency of its own ready for immediate issue. Rather than accept a prolonged monetary union with the new Czech Republic, Slovak authorities chose a blunt interim solution: existing Czechoslovak 20 Korún notes were stamped with adhesive labels to convert them into legal tender of the new state. This P#15 provisional — the stamped note — circulated only briefly before purpose-designed Slovak issues replaced it.

Brunovský designed the underlying Czechoslovak note; Ondráček and Fajt engraved it. Neither man was working for Slovakia — the design was simply inherited.

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