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0.20 Talonas 'Coupon'

Issuer Lithuania
Year 1991
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Value 0.20 Talonas
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Reverse lettering LIETUVOS RESPUBLIKA 1991
(Translation: Republic of Lithuania 1991)
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Protection description Repeated columns of Gediminas (Pillars of Gediminids, Gedimino stulpai) across the sheet — one of the oldest historical symbols of Lithuania and a traditional element of its heraldic heritage.
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Comments

Lithuania's talonas coupons were introduced in May 1991 as a rationing supplement to the Soviet ruble, not a replacement — residents needed both to purchase goods. The system was designed partly to prevent Russians crossing the border to buy up subsidized Lithuanian consumer goods, a genuine and politically charged problem in the months following the independence declaration of March 1990.

Spindulys, a Kaunas printing house with roots in the interwar republic, was the natural choice — the Soviets had kept it running for decades producing state publications. Printing a nationally symbolic currency instrument there carried an obvious point.

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