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10 Centavos

Issuer Bohol Emergency Currency Board
Year 1942
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Reference(s) P#S131
Obverse description The face is typographically printed within a rectangular border of guilloche ornament, with the denomination numeral "10" appearing in the upper left and upper right corners and again within a circular lathe-work medallion at the lower left. A central panel carries the denomination in bold block lettering reading "10 CENTAVOS", flanked by red serial numbers on either side. Three manuscript signatures appear above the printed role designations ACTG. PROV. TREAS. – PROV. AUDITOR – PROV. FISCAL, with a circular Commonwealth of the Philippines seal at the lower right.
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Reverse description The back is entirely typographic, enclosed within a plain double-line frame with a guilloche border. Circular lathe-work medallions bearing the numeral "10" occupy all four corners, and the denomination value "TEN CENTAVOS" is set in large bold block letters at the centre below the issuing authority text arranged in a curved banner at the top.
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Comments

The Bohol Emergency Currency Board was one of several provincial bodies authorized to issue guerrilla currency after the Japanese occupation disrupted normal banking across the Philippine archipelago in 1942. These notes circulated in parallel with — and in direct defiance of — Japanese Military Pesos, which the occupation forces mandated as the sole legal tender. Using or possessing guerrilla currency was a serious risk for civilians.

Bohol's issues are among the more documented provincial series, but attrition was severe: many notes were deliberately destroyed by their holders before capture or during Japanese sweeps.

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