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1 Peso Gobierno Provisional de Mexico

Issuer Gobierno Provisional de Mexico
Year 1916
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Currency Peso (1863-1992)
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Obverse lettering GOBIERNO PROVISIONAL DE MEXICO
MEXICO 1o DE MAYO DE 1916
Nº 442482
SERIE N
L
EL TESORERO GENERAL
P.O. DEL GRIO. EL S.S.
UN PESO
(Translation: Provisional Government of Mexico / Mexico, 1st of May 1916 / No. 442482 / Series N / L / The General Treasurer / On behalf of the Government, the Undersecretary / One Peso)
Reverse description The central vignette reproduces a circular engraving of a Mexican Peso coin dated 1903, bearing the Republica Mexicana cap-and-rays motif with the legend 'REPUBLICA MEXICANA' and 'UN PESO M. 1903 A.M. 90G.' The field is framed by an elaborate geometric guilloche border with pre-Columbian stepped-fret decorative motifs at the corners. A dark banner at the foot of the note carries the circulation decree inscription in bold letterpress, and an oval revenue-style stamp appears at upper left.
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Comments

The Gobierno Provisional under Venustiano Carranza issued a flood of paper currency between 1913 and 1917, and the market was saturated almost immediately. By 1916, so many competing revolutionary factions — Villistas, Zapatistas, Constitutionalists — had printed their own notes that ordinary Mexicans refused paper money wholesale. The phenomenon had a name: the *bilimbiques*, a contemptuous slang term applied to nearly all revolutionary-era paper regardless of issuer.

Carranza's treasury responded in 1916 with the *infalsificables* series, printed domestically and theoretically harder to counterfeit. P#S709 belongs to that chaotic output. Redemption rates after Carranza's consolidation were poor, and large quantities were simply voided.

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