| Popis líce |
Printed in olive-green and pink tones over a light guilloche underprint, the obverse bears at right an intaglio portrait of the Inca ruler Pachacútec in profile wearing traditional headdress, with a vignette of pre-Columbian ceramic vessels at left flanking the national coat of arms at centre. The legend 'BANCO CENTRAL DE RESERVA DEL PERÚ' arches across the top, while 'CINCO SOLES DE ORO' appears in bold letterpress at centre, below which three signature lines for DIRECTOR, PRESIDENTE, and GERENTE GENERAL are arranged beneath the coat of arms. The date 'LIMA, 23 DE FEBRERO DE 1968' and the printer's imprint are set in the lower margin. |
| Opis líce |
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| Popis rubu |
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| Opis rubu |
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| Podpisy |
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| Typ ochrany |
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| Popis ochrany |
Portrait watermark of the Inca ruler Pachacútec, visible in the unprinted area of the note when held to light. |
| Varianty |
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Peru's Soles de Oro denominations were printed by De La Rue throughout much of the mid-twentieth century under long-running contracts that also covered several other South American central banks simultaneously. By 1968, the sol was already under inflationary pressure that would accelerate dramatically through the 1970s — this denomination, worth a fraction of a US cent by the time the Inti replaced the sol in 1985, was effectively rendered obsolete by economic forces rather than deliberate withdrawal.
P#92 sits in the middle of a run that changed relatively little across printings, making precise date attribution reliant on serial number prefixes rather than design differences.