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| 正面描述 | Crimson and orange on yellow underprint. Allegorical vignette of Serbia personified as a female figure with shield and sword at left; portrait of King Peter I at right. Red serial number at lower left; numerical denomination "10" in each corner. |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | CPПCКE YJEДИЊEHE PEПYБЛИКE 10 10 CPПCКA HAPOДHA БAHКA БEOГPAД, 19. ДEЦEMБAP 1991. ГYBEPHEP ФAЛCИФИКOBAЊE CE КAЖNJABA ПO 3AКOHU CP2011960 10 10 CPБИJAHКA P. BEPГOBИЋ P. ШTEКOBИЋ POДYKЦИJA PAИHA ШTAMПA: PYJHO YЖИЦE |
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The "Srbijanka" nickname — applied informally to this and related notes by the Yugoslav public — reflected the increasingly Serbian-dominated character of the federal monetary authority as the republics fractured. By 1991, Slovenia and Croatia had already moved toward monetary independence, and the federal dinar was effectively a Serbian instrument in all but name. Užice, where Štampa Rujno operated, sits in western Serbia; the choice to print there rather than in Belgrade was a matter of capacity, not symbolism.
Hyperinflation was already accelerating. Notes from this series had useful lives measured in weeks.