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5 Dollars - Charles Brooke

Issuer Government of Sarawak
Year 1929
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Printer Bradbury Wilkinson and Company, United Kingdom (1856-1990)
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Obverse lettering THE GOVERNMENT OF SARAWAK PROMISES TO PAY THE BEARER ON DEMAND AT KUCHING FIVE DOLLARS LOCAL CURRENCY FOR VALUE RECEIVED
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Reverse lettering THE GOVERNMENT OF SARAWAK 5 DOLLARS
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Sarawak's currency was a private royal affair — the Brooke family governed as White Rajahs under personal rule, not as a colonial administration, meaning these notes were obligations of the Rajah himself rather than of the British Crown. Charles Vyner Brooke, the third and final White Rajah, had inherited both the territory and the note-issuing function from his father Charles Anthoni Johnson Brooke in 1917. By 1929 the series was already well-established, but the Depression would soon gut trade revenues from rubber and sago, straining the government's ability to maintain convertibility.

Bradbury Wilkinson printed the bulk of Sarawak's paper currency across multiple reigns. Notes from this issue are susceptible to foxing along the margins due to the humidity conditions under which they circulated in Borneo.