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| 正面铭文 | 50 PRIVILEJIADO POR QUINCE AÑOS EL BANCO BOLIVIANO Págára al portador á la vista en La Paz CINCUENTA PESOS FUERTES La Paz de 18__ MINISTRO DE HACIENDA. CONTADOR. DIRECTOR JERENTE. Compañia Nacional de Billetes de Banco, Nueva York. (Translation: Privileged for fifteen years. The Bolivian Bank will pay to the bearer at sight in La Paz, fifty strong pesos. Minister of Finance. Accountant. Managing Director. National Bank Note Company, New York.) |
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| 背面铭文 | 50 EL BANCO BOLIVIANO. Compañia Nacional de Billetes de Banco, Nueva York. (Translation: The Bolivian Bank. National Bank Note Company, New York.) |
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The Banco Boliviano was one of Bolivia's earliest private commercial banks, chartered in the 1860s during a period when the country was attempting to build a functioning credit infrastructure around its silver mining revenues. Contracting the National Bank Note Company in New York was the predictable choice for a South American institution at this moment — ABNC's predecessor firm and its rivals had already cornered much of the Latin American banknote market by mid-century.
The denomination "Pesos Fuertes" — hard pesos — was a deliberate signal to a public that had reason to distrust paper, distinguishing these notes from debased or fractional currency. Whether the bank ever achieved meaningful circulation is another question; Bolivian private banking in this decade was fragile, and most of these institutions folded or were absorbed before their notes wore out.