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500 Francs - Blue and pink type 1888

Issuer Banque de France
Year 1888-1937
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In circulation to 16 December 1943
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Signature(s) 02.11.1888 - 08.07.1889 - Delmotte, Bertin, Billotte
09.01.1890 - 24.04.1897 - Delmotte, d'Anfreville, Billotte
23.03.1899 - 30.06.1900 - Bouchet, d'Anfreville, Billotte
07.02.1901 - 17.04.1902 - Panhard, d'Anfreville, Giraud
27.08.1903 - 26.12.1904 - Frachon, d'Anfreville, Giraud
22.02.1906 - 10.09.1906 - Frachon, d'Anfreville, Picard
24.10.1907 - 04.10.1917 - Frachon, Laferrière, Picard
01.04.1920 - 21.06.1920 - Aupetit, Laferrière, Picard
03.01.1921 - 09.02.1921 - Emmery, Laferrière, Aupetit
01.05.1922 - 11.09.1924 - Emmery, Platet, Aupetit
01.07.1926 - 26.10.1929 / 08.11.1926 - Emmery, Platet, Strohl
01.04.1930 - 29.12.1932 - Roulleau, Platet, Strohl
12.01.1933 - 10.06.1937 - Roulleau, Boyer, Strohl
Protection type Watermark
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Comments

This note's production run of nearly five decades — from the late Opportunist Republic through the Popular Front years — is unusual even by Banque de France standards, which favored long-lived designs but rarely sustained a single type across such political and economic upheaval. The fourteen distinct signature combinations catalogued for P#66 reflect successive changes in bank governance: the three-signatory system required a Gouverneur, Sous-Gouverneur, and Secrétaire Général, and tracing the progression from Delmotte through Roulleau maps almost exactly onto France's shifting monetary politics between the Boulanger crisis and the franc's devaluation under Blum.

Pannemaker — who engraved the reverse — was primarily known as a wood engraver of considerable reputation, his name attached to reproductions of major 19th-century paintings. His involvement here is a reminder of how porous the boundary was between fine-art reproduction and banknote craft in the French atelier tradition. Barre's contribution on the obverse connects the note to an earlier generation of die-cutting expertise at the Paris Mint.

Notes dated between October 1907 and October 1917 carry the longest single signature run in the series — a decade under Frachon and Laferrière, spanning the entirety of the First World War.

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