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5 Pounds

Emittente General Treasury of Ceylon
Anno 1850
Tipo Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Valore Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Valuta Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Composizione Cotton paper
Dimensioni Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Forma Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Stampatore Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Disegnatore/i Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Incisore/i Accedi per vedere i dettagli
In circolazione fino al Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Riferimento/i Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Descrizione del dritto The obverse is arranged in a horizontal format with a central intaglio vignette of a seated allegorical figure amid tropical foliage and palm trees, flanked on either side by diamond-shaped guilloche panels bearing the numeral 5, with Sinhala and Tamil script legends running across the upper and lower borders. A hand-written serial number appears at lower left and upper right, and the promise text in English script reads 'The Bearer hereof is entitled to receive on demand FIVE POUNDS at the General Treasury in the Currency of this Island at Colombo,' with bilingual Sinhala inscriptions interspersed throughout. The word FIVE appears in bold letterpress within an ornate panel at the foot of the note, accompanied by the notation 'Er & Ent'd' at lower right.
Legenda del dritto CEYLON
FIVE POUNDS
FIVE
The Bearer hereof is entitled to receive on demand FIVE POUNDS at the General Treasury in the Currency of this Island at Colombo
එර් & එන්ට්
පවිද්‍රගස
ඉන්දුපවන්
Descrizione del rovescio Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Legenda del rovescio Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Firma/e Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Tipo di protezione Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Descrizione della protezione Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Varianti Accedi per vedere i dettagli
Commenti

The General Treasury of Ceylon issued its own notes from Colombo rather than relying on the private commercial banks — the Oriental Bank and the Chartered Bank — that otherwise dominated the island's paper money supply in the mid-nineteenth century. This government-direct issuance was a deliberate administrative choice, rooted in Whitehall's broader effort to assert tighter fiscal control over Ceylon following the 1848 Matale Rebellion, which had badly strained colonial revenues.

Five-pound denominations at this period were essentially instruments of mercantile and official transaction — plantation accounts, customs settlements, Crown disbursements. Surviving examples from the 1850 Treasury series are extremely rare; the paper printed in Colombo under tropical humidity conditions was not built to last, and redemption and destruction records suggest low survival rates even within the first decade of issue.