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100 Francs

Issuer Banque Internationale à Luxembourg
Year 1923-1940
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Value 100 Francs (100 LUF)
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Obverse lettering BANQUE INTERNATIONALE À LUXEMBOURG 100 CENT FRANCS CEUX QUI AURONT CONTREFAIT OU FALSIFIÉ DES BILLETS DE BANQUE SERONT PUNIS DES TRAVAUX FORCÉS DE 15 À 20 ANS.
(Translation: International Bank of Luxembourg One Hundred Francs Those who have counterfeited or falsified Cash Vouchers will be punished with forced labor for 15 to 20 years.)
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Reverse lettering BANQUE INTERNATIONALE A LUXEMBOURG 100 CENT FRANCS CEUX QUI AURONT CONTREFAIT OU FALSIFIÉ DES BILLETS DE BANQUE SERONT PUNIS DES TRAVAUX FORCÉS DE 15 À 20 ANS.
(Translation: International Bank of Luxembourg One Hundred Francs Those who have counterfeited or falsified Cash Vouchers will be punished with forced labor for 15 to 20 years.)
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Comments

The Banque Internationale à Luxembourg was a private commercial bank, not a central bank — which makes this series unusual by European standards of the period. Luxembourg had no central bank until 1998, and private institutions were authorized to issue notes to fill that gap. The BIL, founded in 1856, was the dominant force in this arrangement for decades.

Pick numbers 9 through 11 reflect signature varieties across the seventeen-year span rather than fundamental design changes — a long run for a private-issue series operating through the Depression years and right up to the German occupation in May 1940, which effectively ended circulation.

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