Vollständige Bilder anzeigen — kostenlose Registrierung
Mit Google fortfahren — kostenlos oder mit E-Mail registrieren

500 Litu

Emittent Lietuvos Bankas (Bank of Lithuania)
Jahr 1924
Typ Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Nennwert Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Währung Old litas (1922-1941)
Material Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Größe Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Form Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Druckerei Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Designer Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Stecher Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Im Umlauf bis Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Referenz(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Vorderseitenbeschreibung Dark brown on multicolour underprint. The face bears the denomination in large numerals alongside the issuance date, two authorising signatures, and the statutory gold conversion clause stating the litas content in pure gold, all set against a guilloche underprint. Text is arranged in a formal typographic layout typical of early interwar Lithuanian banknote production by Bradbury Wilkinson.
Vorderseitenlegende Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Rückseitenbeschreibung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Rückseitenlegende LIETUVOS BANKO BANKNOTAS PENKI ŠIMTAI LITŲ BANKNOTŲ PADIRBIMAS ISTATYMU BAUDZIAMAS
(Translation: Lithuanian Bank Banknote Five Hundred Litu Forgery of Banknotes Punished by Law)
Unterschrift(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Sicherheitsmerkmal Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Beschreibung der Sicherheitsmerkmale Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Varianten Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Anmerkungen

The 500 Litu of 1924 belongs to Lithuania's first sovereign currency series, issued after the litas replaced the ostmark and later the ost-ruble left behind by the German wartime occupation. The litas was pegged to the U.S. dollar at 10 litu to the dollar — a deliberately conservative rate engineered to signal fiscal discipline to foreign creditors and stabilize a population that had lived through several successive currency collapses.

Bradbury Wilkinson handled the full series. Their intaglio work of this period was among the finest commercially available, and Lithuania was not unusual in turning to them — the firm printed for dozens of newly independent states scrambling to establish credible currency in the early 1920s.

At 500 litu, this was the highest denomination in the inaugural series, making surviving examples proportionally rarer than the lower values.