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Colombia - P-S698 - Peso - Foreign Paper Money

Inv# FM2427   Foreign Paper Money
Colombia - P-S698 - Peso - Foreign Paper Money
Country: Colombia
Years: 1888

5 Pesos, P-S698. Banco De Oriente. Rare!

Decree 104 of 19 January 1886 adopted as the monetary unit the one peso note of Banco Nacional, effective 1 May. Decree 448 of 2 August 1886 equated the peso note (billete de a peso) of Banco Nacional to silver coin .835 fine. The United States of Colombia became the Republic of Colombia 5 August 1886. The gold standard was formally suspended 20 December 1886.

In 1893 it was learned that secret note issues had pushed circulation past 12 million pesos back in 1889, and Congress decided to liquidate Banco Nacional. But the bank's existence was extended to 1 January 1896, while it issued another 5 million pesos to cover the costs of the 1895 civil war. The end of the bank was not, however, the end of forced paper. In 1898–1899 the Government put $22 million in notes of Banco Nacional into circulation (despite the fact that the bank no longer existed).

The period 1899–1903 witnessed revolution, civil war (the Thousand Days War of 1899–1902), inflation, and depreciation. There were numerous note issues of various kinds. Then calm slowly returned. A law of 25 October 1903 prohibited new paper money issues, permitted payment in gold to be stipulated in contracts, and reintroduced the gold peso (peso oro), equal to 100 paper pesos, effective 1 January 1904. Outstanding notes were absorbed by auction sales of gold.

El Banco Nacional de la República de Colombia issued notes in 1886 for 50 centavos and 1, 5, and 10 pesos. Notes of a new design appeared in 1888 for 10 centavos and 1, 5, 10, 50, and 100 pesos, with 25 and 1000 added in 1895.

During the civil war the government issued 28 new Banco Nacional note types and overprinted about 48 different private banknotes for circulation.

Condition: C.U.
Item ordered may not be exact piece shown. All original and authentic.
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