By 1950, Greece had already endured one of the worst hyperinflationary collapses in modern history — the 1941–1944 occupation period saw prices rise by a factor of roughly 163 billion, ultimately requiring a 1944 redenomination that lopped eleven zeros off the currency. This 50,000-drachmai note belongs to the post-civil-war stabilization period, when the Bank of Greece was still issuing high-denomination paper to meet demand left over from years of monetary destruction and the brutal civil war that followed liberation.
Printed domestically at the Holargos facility rather than contracted abroad — unusual for Greek issues of the period — which reflects efforts to rebuild sovereign printing capacity after the occupation.
By 1950, Greece had already endured one of the worst hyperinflationary collapses in modern history — the 1941–1944 occupation period saw prices rise by a factor of roughly 163 billion, ultimately requiring a 1944 redenomination that lopped eleven zeros off the currency. This 50,000-drachmai note belongs to the post-civil-war stabilization period, when the Bank of Greece was still issuing high-denomination paper to meet demand left over from years of monetary destruction and the brutal civil war that followed liberation.
Printed domestically at the Holargos facility rather than contracted abroad — unusual for Greek issues of the period — which reflects efforts to rebuild sovereign printing capacity after the occupation.