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| Issuer | Central Bank of Nigeria |
|---|---|
| Year | 1958 |
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| Value | 10 Shillings (1/2) |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | A riverside landscape vignette occupies the left-centre of the note, rendered in intaglio, with palm trees and tropical vegetation along a calm waterway. The upper border carries the heading 'Federation of Nigeria' within a guilloche frame, while 'Central Bank of Nigeria' and the promise-to-pay clause appear below in letterpress. Denomination numerals '10/-' appear at all four corners, with Arabic-script lettering in the lower-right panel and two signature lines with printed titles at centre-bottom. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | Log in to see details |
| Reverse description | The reverse is printed in green intaglio and centres on a large agricultural vignette: a standing male figure in the foreground holds aloft a large bundle of harvested crops, while two workers bend to labour in a field, with a mountain landscape rising behind them. The denomination '10/-' appears in each corner within guilloche panels, and 'Central Bank of Nigeria' is lettered across the top with 'Ten Shillings' in bold below it. |
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| Comments |
Nigeria's first banknote series — this 10 Shillings among them — was issued on 1 July 1959, the date the Central Bank of Nigeria formally opened, though the notes carry a 1958 date reflecting when the designs were finalized and approved. The transition from West African Currency Board issues was politically charged: the WACB had served British colonial territories collectively, and Nigeria's decision to establish its own central bank ahead of independence in 1960 was a deliberate assertion of economic separation from that shared arrangement.
Waterlow & Sons had printed colonial currency across Africa for decades. They were absorbed by De La Rue in 1961, making this series among the final Nigerian commissions the firm completed under its own name before ceasing independent operation.