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24 (tjugu fyra) Daler Kopparmynt

Issuer Riksens Ständers Wäxel-Banco
Year 1748-1761
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Obverse lettering Banco-transport-Sedel No
Åt riksens Ständers Wäxel-Banco hafwer
Sekreteraren
insatt på Transport-Räkningen Tjugu Fyra Daler K:mt. Hwilka 24 Daler K:mt böra egenhändigt och tydeligentransporteras med dog och ähre-tahl, ifrån man til man; Skolandes innchafwaren af then sifsta transporten utbefomma ofwan bemälte Summa.
Stockholm then Anno 175
Säg Tjugu Fyra Daler K:mt.
Nålje colmatta kymmendä Daleri Kupar raha.
Reverse description Plain, unprinted reverse of hand-laid paper showing the natural texture of the substrate, with fold lines and age-related toning visible across the surface, consistent with period circulation use.
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The Riksens Ständers Wäxel-Banco — the Estates of the Realm's Exchange Bank — was the world's first central bank, established in Stockholm in 1668 after the catastrophic collapse of Johan Palmstruch's Stockholms Banco. These notes denominated in Daler Kopparmynt reflect one of the more absurd monetary accounting problems in European history: by the mid-eighteenth century, the copper-based Daler Kopparmynt had diverged so severely from the silver Daler Silvermynt that it took over three copper dalers to equal one silver, forcing Sweden to maintain parallel denominational systems simultaneously.

The 1745–1766 period saw the bank under heavy political pressure from the "Cap" and "Hat" party factions, each manipulating note issuance for war financing. Inflation from overprinting eventually forced the 1776 monetary reform under Gustav III.

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