Catálogo
| Emisor | Suomen Pankki (Bank of Finland) |
|---|---|
| Año | 1898 |
| Tipo | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Valor | 50 Markkaa |
| Moneda | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Composición | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Tamaño | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Forma | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| 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 | Blue-toned note with a central eagle crest vignette flanked at left by a female allegorical figure holding a tablet. Denomination numerals occupy three corners over a large "50M" guilloche underprint, with the serial number printed at centre and lower left. Two authorising signatures appear at bottom centre beneath the issue year. |
|---|---|
| Leyenda del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del reverso | The Finnish coat of arms — the rampant lion — occupies the central vignette, enclosed within a wreath of spruce twigs. The denomination numeral "50" appears alongside trilingual text in Russian, Swedish, and Finnish arranged around the central arms, with a smaller circular legend in Swedish and Finnish citing the monetary law of 9 August 1877. |
| 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 1898 series for Suomen Pankki was produced while Finland remained an autonomous Grand Duchy under the Russian Empire, but the notes were deliberately Finnish in character — issued in Finnish and Swedish, denominated in markka rather than rubles, and administered entirely through Helsinki. The Bank of Finland had operated its own currency since 1860, a monetary arrangement St. Petersburg tolerated until the pressures of Russification policy later made such autonomy politically fraught.
Pick 6 is among the less commonly encountered denominations from this issue, as higher-value notes saw more restricted day-to-day circulation and suffered higher attrition through official cancellation and destruction at redemption.