目录
| 正面描述 | A consumer ration card (картка спажыўца) printed on pale pink paper, divided into a grid of 28 individual detachable coupons arranged in rows and columns across the full sheet. A central white registry panel carries the issuing authority's identification fields and anti-counterfeiting notice, printed in Belarusian in black letterpress. |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | Рэспубліка Беларусь КАРТКА СПАЖЫЎЦА на 300 рублёў Прозвішча __________ Кім выдадзена __________ Кіраўнік __________ Галоўны бухгалтар __________ М. П. ПАДРОБКА ПРАСЛЕДУЕЦЦА ПА ЗАКОНУ (Translation: Republic of Belarus, Consumer card for 300 Rubles, Last name / Issuing authority / Administrator / Chief accountant, Counterfeit is prosecuted by law) |
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Belarus issued its first post-Soviet paper currency as a provisional measure before the permanent Belarusian ruble series was fully established. The 300 Roubles (P#A24) belongs to the 1992 "animals series" — formally the Razlichitelnyye Znaki, or "distinction signs" — a transitional coupon currency introduced partly to reduce dependence on Soviet-era Russian ruble supplies still circulating in the country.
The large physical format reflects inherited Soviet printing conventions from the Goznak tradition, not any particular security ambition. Hyperinflation rendered most of this series obsolete within two to three years; 300 roubles, a meaningful denomination in early 1992, was worth almost nothing by 1994.