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2000 Tolarjev not issued

Issuer Secretariat of Finance, Republic of Slovenia
Year 1992
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Shape Rectangular
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Obverse description The obverse centres on a vignette of Triglav, the highest peak of the Julian Alps and the preeminent symbol of Slovenian national identity, set against a multicolour guilloche underprint. The country name REPUBLIKA SLOVENIJA is inscribed along the upper border, with the denomination numeral 2000 appearing in the lower left and upper right corners and the verbal equivalent DVA TISOČ rendered below. The serial number runs vertically along the right margin.
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Reverse description The reverse presents the large denomination numeral 2000 as the dominant element, set within an intricate guilloche underprint, with REPUBLIKA SLOVENIJA inscribed across the upper portion. A vignette of the Prince's Stone (Knežji kamen / Fürstenstein), the historic coronation stone of Carinthian dukes, occupies the lower left corner, while inscriptions referencing the Secretariat of Finance and the statutory anti-counterfeiting warning appear along the lower margin.
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Comments

Slovenia's 2000 Tolarjev was designed and printed in 1992 but never formally released into circulation — one of several denominations prepared during the hurried construction of a new monetary system following independence from Yugoslavia in June 1991. The Tolar itself launched in October 1991, but not every prepared denomination made the cut. Cetis in Celje, a printing firm with an unusually long domestic history, handled production entirely within Slovenian borders, which was itself a political statement for a country barely a year into sovereignty.

The P#9A designation confirms it as an unissued remainder. Surviving examples come almost exclusively from printer's archives or official holdings.

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