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5000 Francs

Issuer Caisse Centrale de la France d'Outre-Mer
Year 1960
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Printer Banque de France, France
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Obverse description Multicolor intaglio vignette with a native woman holding a fruit bowl at center right, palm trees at left, set against a tropical landscape underprint. The denomination numerals appear at the upper corners, with the issuing authority inscription across the lower portion of the note.
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Reverse description Multicolor central vignette of a sugar-cane harvesting scene with workers cutting cane by hand and a mule at center, framed by pineapple and tropical fruit side panels in a guilloche border. The word 'guadeloupe' repeats in red script along all four margins, with the issuing authority name in bold blue letterpress at center and the anti-counterfeiting legal warning in a small panel at lower left.
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Comments

The Caisse Centrale de la France d'Outre-Mer was a Paris-based institution responsible for currency supply across French overseas territories — not a colonial central bank in any sovereign sense, but a metropolitan tool for managing monetary circulation in territories undergoing rapid political change. By 1960, many of those territories were months away from independence, and notes of this denomination were already being displaced by newly created national currencies across West and Central Africa.

High-denomination issues from this final period tend to surface in lighter circulated grades; the transition to successor currencies was fast enough that larger values often sat in institutional hands rather than moving through trade.

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