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5 Pounds

Emisor Colonial Bank of Natal
Año 1864
Tipo Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Valor 5 Pounds
Moneda Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Composición Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Tamaño Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Forma Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Impresor Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Diseñador(es) Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Grabador(es) Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
En circulación hasta Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Referencia(s) Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Descripción del anverso The obverse is engraved in a classic Victorian commercial style, with the bank title "COLONIAL BANK OF NATAL" arched across the upper portion beneath an ornate vignette incorporating the bank's monogram "CBN" within a decorative cartouche. The denomination "Five Pounds Sterling" appears in letterpress text accompanied by the promise clause "WE PROMISE to pay the BEARER on DEMAND at our Office here VALUE RECEIVED," with the place of issue stated as "Pietermaritzburg, Natal." A bold guilloche panel at lower left carries the words "Five Pounds" in large script, with manuscript date, serial number, and signatures of the Manager and Trustees completing the design.
Leyenda del anverso COLONIAL BANK OF NATAL
No.
£5
WE PROMISE to pay the BEARER on DEMAND at our Office here
Five Pounds Sterling VALUE RECEIVED.
Pietermaritzburg, Natal.
Five Pounds
By order of the Board of Directors.
For The Trustees.
ENT. Manager
Descripción del reverso Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Leyenda del reverso Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Firma(s) Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Tipo de protección Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Descripción de la protección Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Variantes Inicie sesión para ver los detalles
Comentarios

The Colonial Bank of Natal was a short-lived institution — it folded in 1866, just two years after this note was issued, absorbed into the broader consolidation of colonial banking that reshaped Natal's financial structure in the 1860s. The bank never achieved the foothold in Pietermaritzburg that its founders had intended.

Saul Solomon & Co. was a Cape Town printing and publishing house better known for its newspaper work than for banknote production. The choice reflects the limited specialist printing infrastructure available in southern Africa at the time — notes of this type were simply beyond what local facilities could produce with the security features a London firm would have offered.

Survivors are extremely rare; the bank's brief existence and small circulation area account for that.