カタログ
| 表面の説明 | The obverse is printed in black on pale cream paper in a predominantly typographic style characteristic of early colonial currency. The issuer title 'THE GOVERNMENT OF THE EAST AFRICA PROTECTORATE' appears within an ornate guilloche cartouche at the top, with the promise-to-pay legend in elegant copperplate script below. The denomination '50' appears in large numerals within guilloche rosettes at left and right, flanking a central panel with 'FIFTY RUPEES' in bold letterpress, beneath which the denomination is repeated in Arabic and Gujarati scripts; the date 'Mombasa, 1st September 1905' and the Currency Commissioner's manuscript signature appear in the lower portion. |
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| 表面の銘文 | THE GOVERNMENT OF THE EAST AFRICA PROTECTORATE PROMISES TO PAY THE BEARER ON DEMAND THE SUM OF FIFTY RUPEES FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE EAST AFRICA PROTECTORATE |
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The Government of the East Africa Protectorate's currency notes were a direct administrative response to the chaos of multiple competing trade currencies then circulating across British East Africa — Indian rupees, Maria Theresa thalers, and various commodity tokens among them. London authorized a formal protectorate issue in 1905 to bring some order to the mess.
De La Rue produced the series, as they did for the vast majority of British colonial currency at the time. The 50 Rupee denomination would have seen almost no hand-to-hand circulation — this was serious mercantile and government transaction paper in a territory where most ordinary exchange still happened in kind or in coin.