Каталог
| Эмитент | Oriental Bank Corporation, Galle |
|---|---|
| Год | 1866-1880 |
| Тип | Standard circulation banknote |
| Номинал | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Валюта | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Материал | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Размер | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Форма | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Типография | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Художник(и) | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Гравёр(ы) | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| В обращении до | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Каталожные номера | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Описание лицевой стороны | The note is engraved in a monochrome olive-green palette with a fine guilloche border framing the entire design. At the centre top, the Royal Arms vignette — a lion and unicorn supporters with crown above — is flanked by two oval cartouches each inscribed FIVE RUPEES, with Sinhalese and Tamil script legends appearing at the upper corners. Below, the issuer's name THE ORIENTAL BANK CORPORATION is set in bold letterpress, followed by a manuscript promise-to-pay text referencing payment at the Galle branch or at their Bank in Colombo, the date line reading Galle, Ceylon with the place of issue, and a handwritten agent's signature and accountant's endorsement at the foot. |
|---|---|
| Надписи лицевой стороны | FIVE RUPEES INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER GALLE, CEYLON THE ORIENTAL BANK CORPORATION Promise to pay the Bearer on demand at their Branch here, or at their Bank in Colombo FIVE RUPEES or the equivalent in the Currency of this Island. Value received. By order of the Court of Directors, Accountt Agent |
| Описание оборотной стороны | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Надписи оборотной стороны | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Подпись(и) | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Тип защиты | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Описание защиты | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Варианты | Войдите чтобы увидеть детали |
| Комментарии |
The Oriental Bank Corporation was a British overseas bank chartered in Bombay in 1842, later headquartered in London, and by the 1860s operating across Ceylon, India, China, and Australia. Its Galle branch issued private banknotes at a time when no government currency authority existed for Ceylon — these were genuinely circulating commercial instruments, not government scrip. The bank collapsed catastrophically in 1884, a failure driven largely by bad loans tied to falling commodity prices across its Asian branch network.
Notes from the Galle branch are rare precisely because the failure triggered immediate recall and destruction of outstanding paper. Survivors almost certainly escaped redemption through loss, hoarding, or abandonment in the chaos following the bank's closure.