| توضیحات روی اسکناس |
Black intaglio print on white paper with green underprint. The central vignette presents the Royal Bank of Canada coat of arms flanked by two male portrait vignettes in oval frames — a gentleman in a suit to the left and another to the right — set against an intricate guilloche background. The denomination 'FIVE DOLLARS' is inscribed in bold lettering at the bottom center, with 'DOMINION OF CANADA' along the top border and 'WILL PAY TO BEARER ON DEMAND' beneath the bank name. |
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| توضیحات پشت اسکناس |
Printed in green intaglio on white paper, the reverse is dominated by a large central vignette of the British Royal Arms with lion and unicorn supporters, crown above, and the motto 'DIEU ET MON DROIT' on a ribbon below. Two ornate guilloche rosettes bearing the numeral '5' flank the central arms, one to each side, with corner numerals '5' set within decorative scroll-work. The bank name 'THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA' arches across the top, and 'FIVE DOLLARS' appears in a straight panel at the bottom. |
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| نوع ویژگی امنیتی |
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The Royal Bank of Canada's 1935 series marked a significant transitional moment for Canadian chartered bank currency — it was among the last generations of notes issued by private banks before the Bank of Canada assumed monopoly over paper money circulation. The Bank of Canada Act took effect in 1934, and by 1950 chartered banks were legally prohibited from issuing their own notes. This 1935 issue was effectively printed in the knowledge that its days were numbered.
British American Bank Note Co. in Ottawa produced the series. J.F. Dobson served as General Manager of the Royal Bank, with H.W. Vaughan as President at the time of issue — signature pairings on chartered bank notes help narrow dating within a series more precisely than the face year alone.