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| Emisor | Bank of Central China (華中銀行) |
|---|---|
| Año | 1946 |
| Tipo | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Valor | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Moneda | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Composición | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Tamaño | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Forma | Rectangular |
| 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 | Printed in violet-brown on a plain ground, the obverse carries a central vignette of a bugler standing before a section of the Great Wall, rendered in a bold letterpress style. The bank title 華中銀行 appears at the top centre, flanked by the denomination 伍圓 repeated in large characters at left and right, with two official red seal chops positioned below the vignette. The date inscription 中華民國三十五年 runs along the lower margin. |
|---|---|
| Leyenda del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del reverso | Printed entirely in olive-green, the reverse is composed of an elaborate guilloche underprint with rosette and lattice patterns filling the entire field. A large central medallion contains the numeral 5 in bold relief, flanked by two smaller rosette medallions, all enclosed within a multi-bordered frame of fine geometric engine-turned work. |
| 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 Bank of Central China was established in 1945 under the auspices of the Central China Bureau of the Chinese Communist Party, operating in the Liberated Areas as a deliberate counterpart to Nationalist financial infrastructure. These regional Communist-issued notes circulated in parallel with — and in direct competition against — Kuomintang currency and the puppet bank notes still lingering in areas recently vacated by Japanese occupation forces. The monetary situation in central China in 1946 was genuinely chaotic, with multiple competing currencies circulating simultaneously and exchange rates between them shifting on political as much as economic grounds.
Survival rates for this series are uneven. Notes that circulated in active combat zones often disappeared entirely, while others were methodically withdrawn once the People's Bank of China consolidated regional issuers after 1948.