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Saor Alba

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Posts posted by Saor Alba

  1. Yes, Vittorio Emannuel was the King of Italy until 1946, and he was on the larger denomination coins - sometimes in a military helmet.

     

    BTW some dictators didn't put themselves on currency, Anastasio Somoza Garcia was the dictator of Nicaragua from the 1930's until his death in 1956, curiously his daughter was on the Nicaraguan Cordoba until 1960:

     

    nicaragua11958dtl.jpg

     

    nicaragua11958.jpg

  2. Nicolae Ceausescu has not appeared on any bill or any coin!

    Are many dictators who have appeared on coins or banknotes: Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Pol Pot, Kim Jong Il, etc..

     

     

    Nicolae the Impaler was too ugly to make his mark on money - and too busy building monomaniacal palaces in Bucharest. He didn't even have a whole lot of statues like most dictators. He sure did his best to try to destroy a wonderful people and country.

  3. Fidel Castro is the only one, and only in a small vignette on the reverse of the old 1 Peso note from the 1980's where he was depicted from his entrance into Havana in 1959 in a jeep.

     

    Chairman Mao is on all current Chinese banknotes, as Kim Il Sung is on all current and many former North Korean banknotes. Saddam Hussein was infamously depicted on Iraqi banknotes.

  4. Mercantile Bank was a much smaller bank, and had far fewer banknotes in circulation - which is regrettable for collectors - because they are wonderfully designed and in deep deep red:

     

    hongkongmercantile1001974dtl.jpg

     

    hongkongmercantile1001974.jpg

     

    Notes were last issued dated 1974, the bank was sold to Citibank in 1984 and the name disappeared. Subsequently the assets of the bank were sold to Bank of Tokyo - Mitsubishi in 1987 and the bank completely disappeared.

  5. The significance of the B&W note is that it represents one of the last "souvenirs" from this printer, and their usual exquisite work. The Harrison's note is fantastic, being an admirer of Isambard Kingdom Brunel is a definite plus, he was a fantastic road and marine entrepreneur - the likes of which stands at the apex of amazing 19th century British industrialists, and worthy of a circulating medium beyond a commemorative - and more the likes of a circulating medium.

  6. switzerland20dtl.jpg

     

    switzerland20.jpg

     

    the design of this banknote was done by the printer, Orell Fussli, a firm founded in 1519 by Christoph Froschauer. The feminine vignette is known as Helvetia and her image is borrowed from the gold 20 CHF coin. This design caused a bit of a stir when it was released, because well, Helvetia is rather voluptuous and healthy. This banknote represents some of the finest of printing technology available in the 1920's by a printer that is still one of the leaders in secure banknote printing today.

     

    switzerland20auhelvetia.jpg

  7. Straits Settlements 1930 $1 Fancy Number Repeater 27272

     

    This is my worst condition note in my Straits Settlements Collection but it is also the nicest serial number among all the SS notes.

     

    Extremely difficult to find nice fancy numbers such as repeater, radar, solids for any Straits Settlements notes.

     

    Nobody collect fancy numbers during the early days in this region.

     

    StraitsSettlements1930127272-F-1000.jpg

     

     

    Tres bonne Monsieur, cette belle! I love red, and early De La Rue notes.

  8. Arriving this afternoon was this rather hard to get (in a decent grade) 10 Franc note from French West Africa. It's smaller than I had expected, 3-7/8 inchesX2-3/8 inches (9.7x6cm) but it is the best grade I have ever seen.... and less than half price of one in a full grade below, so I'm pretty happy all around. Plus it's a nice solid serial number - even if it is that bad ol'e 666 - so I suppose that might be an added plus. Now I'm on the search for an AUNC to UNC 100 Franc note..... hard to find in that condition, though.

     

    zt893o.jpg

     

     

    An amazing note, and no small challenge to find such a nice example of as I am finding with African notes. One unfortunate thing I have noticed with several of the French West Africa and Belgian Congo notes is that you can identify characterisations on the notes, particularly beginning in the 1930's and through the 1950's that would cause an uproar these days. That fact alone makes these highly collectable as testaments to a brutal colonial era.

  9. mexicobanconacional501912dtl2.jpg

     

    mexicobanconacional501912.jpg

     

    mexicobanconacional501912dtl1.jpg

     

    The first vignette on the left of the note is rather famous in Mexican banknote collecting annals, La Siesta is the title of this work that graced the $50 denomination for this bank. High grade, issued, banknotes from this era of Mexico are difficult to find as they were called in and redeemed when Banco de Mexico became the sole issuer of paper money in the 1920's. As with most Mexican banknotes this note portrays lovely colouring coupled with deeply embossed engravings - in this case proprietary images to Banco Nacional. The lady on the right of the note appeared on all denominations from this bank.

  10. ukraine2001942dtl.jpg

    This note has a stirringly mysterious vignette of a peasant with bundled sheaves of wheat in the background, rather haunting and ironic in effect. In reality the Germans managed to pillage most of the grain grown in Ukraine during their occupation and very little actually went to the local population.

    ukraine2001942.jpg

     

    When the Germans overran Ukraine they imposed a whole new monetary system on the country, the USSR rubles were removed from circulation at a rate of 1:1 vs the karbovnets denominated currency that they issued. The karbovnets was valued at 10:1 to the German Reichsmark. Curiously, but tellingly the Germans issued this currency with only a small amount of Ukrainian langauge text - on the bottom reverse of the note - in effect letting the Ukrainians know where they stood in the situation. The first notes prepared had all of the text in Ukrainian, but they were rejected by the German run "Central Emission Bank". One wonders why they even bothered denominating the currency in a name familiar to Ukrainians, they might just as well as referred to the new currency as marks given the presence of mostly German language on the notes.

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