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5 Ryksdaalders/Rixdaalders (of 48 Heavy Stivers Indian Money)

Issuer Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie (United East India Company), Kolumbo
Year 1795
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Currency Rixdollar (1783-1826)
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Obverse lettering Seven Hundred
No. Vijf en Zeventig
Zegge VYF Ryksdaalders
Wy ondergetekende Certificeeren, dat Thoonher dees-, by de Compagnie te goet heeft Vyf Ryksdaalders of 48. zware Stuyvers, Indisch-Geld, voor welkers waerde dees Kreditbrief overal ten deezen Eilande gangbaar zal gehouden worden.
KOLUMBO den 17. SEPTEMBER Anno 1795
goet voor Ryksdaalders
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Reverse lettering CANCELLED
Den 7 Jann 1806
Delkie 5 Rd Legged afgewezen aan den Lenen Romiel Bellthanke Den 15 January 1806
Colomes 22 April 1824
Van de Graaff en jaar
payment of his maternal inheritance deposited in the said fund
Colomes 22 April 1824
By order
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Comments

The VOC's Ceylon operation issued paper money only in its final years — an organization that had traded in Asia for nearly two centuries using coin and credit instruments suddenly found itself short of hard currency as the Company collapsed under debt and mismanagement. These Colombo-issued notes date to 1795, the year the VOC was effectively wound down by the Batavian Republic following French occupation of the Netherlands. The Company ceased to exist formally on 31 December 1799.

The denomination in "Indian Money" stivers reflects the VOC's parallel currency accounting system used across its Asian territories, distinct from Dutch domestic values. Printing locally in Colombo rather than Batavia was unusual and speaks to the fractured logistics of the Company's last operational period.

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