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5 Dinars

Issuer Government of Iraq
Year 1940
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Size 175 x 95 mm
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Obverse lettering حكومة العراق
خمسة دنانير
A309.629
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Reverse lettering GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ
FIVE DINARS
CURRENCY NOTE ISSUED AND CONVERTIBLE INTO STERLING, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISIONS OF LAW NO 44 OF 1931
BRADBURY WILKINSON & CO ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS NEW MALDEN SURREY ENGLAND
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Comments

Iraq's paper currency in 1940 was issued not by a central bank but by the Currency Board system established under the British Mandate — meaning this note was ultimately backed by sterling reserves held in London, a colonial-era arrangement that persisted well into the independent state's early decades. Bradbury Wilkinson, a firm with a long pedigree in high-security intaglio work, handled the printing, as they did for much of the Iraqi series through this period.

The 1940 issue came during a politically volatile stretch: the following year saw the short-lived Rashid Ali coup and a brief war with Britain, after which the currency board structure was reasserted under firmer Allied control.