Catalog
| Issuer | Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank |
|---|---|
| Year | 1835-1856 |
| Type | Standard circulation banknote |
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| Obverse description | The obverse is printed in dark green intaglio on pale green paper, with the issuer's name in bold letterpress at centre reading 'Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank'. A crowned lion passant atop a globe serves as the central vignette at the top, flanked by radiating sunburst lines. The denomination appears in two lateral oval guilloche panels reading 'Riksdr' and 'Banco', with a central oval cartouche inscribed 'Sex och Trettiotva skill.', and the date and place of issue 'Stockholm den 1e December 1841' in script lettering below. Vertical side borders carry repeated inscriptions of the denomination value, and a serial number and letter designation appear in the upper register. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank Nº 95651 Litt. G Riksdr Sex och Trettiotva skill. Banco med 2½ Riksdr Silfver Specie, enligt 1830 Års Mynt-Fot. Stockholm den 1e December 1841 RIKSDr 10 RIKSGD |
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| Comments |
Sveriges Rikes Ständers Bank — the precursor to Sveriges Riksbank — issued this note during a period when Swedish monetary denominations were still tied to the baroque fractional arithmetic of the riksdaler system, where banco, riksgälds, and specie values all floated against each other at legislated but contested rates. The 6 2/3 riksdaler denomination is not an eccentricity; it equals precisely one-third of 20 riksdaler banco, a clean fraction within the internal accounting logic of the period.
The banco designation mattered. Riksdaler banco was the more stable of the competing units, anchored to the Riksbank's own books rather than the state debt certificates underpinning riksgälds notes. Sweden's currency unification in 1855, which collapsed these parallel systems into a single riksdaler riksmynt, effectively ended the rationale for this denomination.