目录
| 正面描述 | The obverse is dominated by a large central vignette of African wildlife — rhinoceros, elephants, Cape buffalo, and a giraffe — set against a savanna landscape with a bare acacia tree, rendered in green intaglio on a yellow and green guilloche underprint. The bank title in Arabic (بنك السودان المركزي) appears along the top, with the denomination numeral "٥٠" in large format at left and right margins. Two signatures appear at lower left above the Arabic title "المحافظ", and the date "٩ يوليو ٢٠٠٦" is inscribed vertically at left; a holographic strip with the numeral 50 and a map of Sudan runs along the right edge. |
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| 背面描述 | The reverse carries a central vignette of domestic livestock — a zebu bull flanked by two sheep — in intaglio over a green underprint, with a background vignette of a camel caravan in pale yellow tones. The issuer name "CENTRAL BANK OF SUDAN" is printed in dark letters across the top, and the denomination "FIFTY SUDANESE POUNDS" with the numeral "50" appears in the lower right corner. The vertical legend "Legal Tender Banknote" runs along the left margin, and the date "July 9 2006" is printed vertically at the right; a decorative band of geometric Sudanese motifs runs along the lower portion of the note. |
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Sudan's 2006 currency revision came during a period of acute monetary strain — the country was managing the aftershocks of decades of civil conflict, international sanctions, and a chronically weak pound. De La Rue's involvement here is notable; by the mid-2000s the Khartoum government was working to bring its higher denominations up to modern security standards, and the holographic strip on this issue reflects that push.
P#69 is the last substantive 50 Pound type before the 2007–2011 transitional issues that preceded South Sudanese secession and the subsequent currency split in 2011.