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| 正面描述 | Red border underprint frames the note, with brown intaglio imagery and text at center. A vignette of the Central Bank building appears within a square frame, flanked to the left by the Central Bank coat of arms; the issuer name arches across the top. Face value appears in numerals at all four corners and in letters below and to the right of the central vignette, with the legal tender clause inscribed in small text. A brown serial number with letter prefix is positioned at upper right, accompanied by the manuscript signatures of the Governor and Secretary of the Bank. |
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| 背面描述 | Unadorned reverse in a plain layout, without any central vignette. The issuer name runs along the top, the face value in numerals appears at all four corners, and the full denomination in letters is centered above the numerical value at the middle of the note. |
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The Dominican Republic's 25 Centavos Oro note of 1961 was issued during the final year of Rafael Trujillo's thirty-one-year dictatorship — he was assassinated in May of that year. Currency produced under his regime bore the weight of a state apparatus that treated the central bank as a personal instrument; the Banco Central had only been formally established in 1947, replacing monetary arrangements that Trujillo himself had restructured to consolidate control over Dominican finances.
ABNC's involvement with Dominican issues ran across multiple decades and denominations. The "Oro" designation distinguishes this from peso-denominated paper, a holdover from the currency's formal peg to the U.S. dollar at par, which held through this period.