CPM Forum
Canadian Notes => Show and Tell => Topic started by: Breanna72 on September 02, 2024, 04:56:47 pm
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Hey All,
I have never set out to be a world note collector but people keep gifting them to me so ... guess I am. :D
Met a friend the other day and he gave me all of the notes that he collected while travelling the world for work as a geology engineer, or for pleasure. Photos are of front and back. Will be a couple of posts.
Notes with approximate years are: 1966 Portugal, 1990 China, 1994 Kazakhstan, 1995 Papua New Guinea, 1996 Hong Kong/Shanghai, 1997 Russia, 1997 Chile, 1999 Indonesia, 2002 Republic of Columbia, 2003 Mongolia, 2003 Dominican Republic, 2012 Mexico
Enjoy,
B
P.S. the Mexico 100 Peso note has a bank stamp on it for "Banco Azteca, S.A. 127" but sorry Dean, I’m keeping it. :'(
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I visited an old university flatmate from Ireland in 2004. While there, I could not find a decent 5 Euro with the short lived (1st) Wim Duisenburg signature so that challenge (once I got home) & my friends collection of about 100 circulated world notes (he was a "globe-trotter" collector too) nudged me into collecting World a year or two later.
The 500 Escudos from Portugal is from 1966, has the 4th Nunes & Coutinho signature combo is popular & sells for about $15 in that condition. I don't know much about the other notes (from Chile, Russia, DR) but I have the same 5000 Pesos from Columbia (radar) and an Indonesian radar too.
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Here's the 5 & 10 Euro notes I was looking for both from Greece, with the Duisenberg signature. You can tell they're from Greece due to the Y prefix:
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Hey WTTW,
Thanks for all that! I do really like both the Portuguese and Columbian notes. (is it wrong of me to say I want to test the Columbian note for cocaine?) LOL ... too late!! 8) :D
I also like the 5000 Russian Ruble note which is actually dated 1993 as it pairs nicely with the Kazakhstan notes also dated 1993 which I think (maybe wrong) are the first issues of notes for both countries, after the break up of the Soviet Union. Don't quote me on this.
I am very grateful to my friend for giving me these notes. He doesn't have kids and I'm sure he felt that I would be the next best 'ambassador' for them, which I will.
It sure is odd that I can't get a Canadian paper note in the wild (proverbially) if my life depended on it ... but other paper notes just seem to find their way to me -- from all corners of the globe! Just goes to show --- maybe its true that when "He" closes one door, He really DOES open a window!!! LOL ;)
Cheers, B
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Thanks for those too WTTW!
I need to learn more about Euros. I have friends going to Sicily, crossing into Italy and traveling north to Austria in September. Is there anything I should ask them to find for me??? LOL
B
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Here's the 5 & 10 Euro notes I was looking for both from Greece, with the Duisenberg signature. You can tell they're from Greece due to the Y prefix:
(Fun?) facts about the first series of Euro banknotes:
The prefix indicates which National Central Bank ordered the notes. In this case, the €5 and the €10 were ordered by the Greek NCB.
However, the first series also has a printer code on the obverse.
It's N001B5 for the €5 note and F001B5 for the €10 note. The first letter indicates where the note was printed. 001B5 is the plate number and the position on the sheet.
N is the code for Greece -- meaning this €5 note was ordered by the Greek NCB AND printed in Greece. The F is code for ''Österreichische Banknoten- und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH,'' which means this €10 note was ordered by the Greek NCB. But it was printed in Austria by the Austrian national printer.
And yes, there are €10 notes which were ordered AND printed in Greece.
These days, Euro banknotes from Series 1 have (almost) completely disappeared from circulation. I haven't seen one in at least four or five years.
The second series of Euro banknotes, called the ''Europe series,'' does not have a code which NCB ordered the note.
Here, the serial number prefix indicates which company printed the note.
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Is there anything I should ask them to find for me??? LOL
Not sure: the last part of our honeymoon was in Salzburg, Austria. My wife finally let me browse in the local coin shop & all the banknotes were extremely circulated & so over-graded/over priced, I ended up buying Euro commemorative coins (the first time I laid eyes on these).
(Fun?) facts about the first series of Euro banknotes:
Thanks @Redlock & that's the stuff I eat up. At the time I got the Greek 5 & 10 Euro, the sellers mentioned that the 10 was printed in Austria. I also bought a 20 Euro note issued from Portugal but printed in the UK by TLDR (It was a "3 note deal" & quite dear). But I'm happy now as I learned that these are pretty tough to come by.
Here's the business side of the 20 Euro: