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5 Angolares

Issuer Banco de Angola
Year 1947
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Currency Angolar (1928-1958)
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Obverse lettering BANCO DE ANGOLA CINCO ANGOLARES
(Translation: Bank of Angola, Five Angolares)
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Reverse lettering BANCO DE ANGOLA PROCLAMO NESTE LUGAR SAGRADO DA PATRIA A UNIDADE INDESTRUTIVEL E ETERNA DE PORTUGAL D'ÀQUEM E D'ÀLEM-MAR PONTA DO PADRÃO 3-7-1938 GENERAL CARMONA 1483-1938
(Translation: Bank of Angola, I proclaim in this sacred place of the homeland the indestructible and eternal unity of Portugal from here and beyond the sea, Ponta do Padrão, 3-7-1938, General Carmona, 1483-1938)
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Comments

Waterlow & Sons printed this series for Banco de Angola throughout the mid-colonial period, with the 1947 date placing it squarely in the post-war reorganization of Portuguese overseas banking. Angola's monetary administration was tightened considerably after 1945, with Lisbon exerting closer control over note issuance through the Banco de Angola, which had held the circulation monopoly since 1926.

Waterlow's involvement in colonial African currency printing was extensive during this period — their London operation handled paper money for multiple Portuguese, British, and Belgian territories simultaneously, which occasionally produced shared design elements across unrelated issuers. The watermark security on P#77 is the sole mechanical anti-counterfeiting measure, typical for low-denomination colonial notes of this vintage where production cost was weighed against the note's face value.

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