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| 正面描述 | Green and brown-lilac bicolour print with a portrait vignette of Nasr-ed-Din Shah at right, accompanied by the Iranian government seal. The design incorporates intricate guilloche underprint patterns typical of Waterlow & Sons engraving work. Persian inscriptions identify the issuing authority and denomination, with a blank space reserved for the payable city name. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | Printed entirely in green, the reverse is dominated by a large central guilloche rosette enclosing a bold numeral "5", framed by an elaborate interlocking scroll and floral border. The bank name arches across the upper portion within a curved cartouche, while the word "FIVE" appears in ornate serif lettering to the left and the denomination panel "FIVE TOMANS" is set in a solid rectangular cartouche at the foot. The printer's imprint of Waterlow & Sons Limited, London Wall, appears in small text at the bottom centre. |
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The Imperial Bank of Persia was a British-chartered institution, established in 1889 under a concession granted by Nasr-ed-Din Shah, and it held the exclusive right to issue banknotes in Persia for decades. That the bank continued printing notes bearing Nasr-ed-Din Shah's portrait well into the 1920s — long after his 1896 assassination and through the effective end of the Qajar dynasty — reflects the slow administrative inertia of a concessionary bank more answerable to London than to Tehran.
Waterlow & Sons printed the series, as they did much of the bank's output. By 1932, the newly consolidated Bank Melli Iran had absorbed the note-issuing privilege entirely, ending the Imperial Bank's monetary role in the country.