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10 000 000 Hell Bank Note

Issuer 冥通銀行 (Hell Bank)
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Composition Paper
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Obverse description Red and green votive note printed on thin paper, with the denomination 壹仟萬 (Ten Million) in large Chinese characters at centre against a guilloche rosette underprint. An oval vignette to the right contains a bust portrait of the Jade Emperor in imperial court regalia. Two facsimile signatures appear at bottom centre and right, with a serial number in the upper right field.
Obverse lettering 10,000,000
冥通銀行
冥府紙幣
壹仟萬
陰冥通用
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Comments

Hell Bank Notes are ceremonial paper offerings burned at Chinese funerals and ancestral rites, intended to supply the deceased with funds in the afterlife. The practice draws on centuries of Taoist and folk Buddhist tradition, but the modern printed format — complete with invented bank names, serial numbers, and absurdly inflated denominations — dates largely from the mid-twentieth century, when manufacturers began styling them after real currency to make them more convincing as symbolic substitutes.

The denomination arms race is genuine: billions gave way to trillions, and this ten-million figure is now considered modest by current production standards.

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