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100 Gulden Recepis

Issuer De Javasche Bank
Year 1846
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Value 100 Gulden
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Obverse description Blue-grey letterpress print on cream paper, with an ornate geometric border of interlocking guilloche patterns and corner medallions. A central oval radiating-line vignette contains the denomination in Dutch, Arabic, and Javanese script, with a dotted rosette enclosing the numeral 100 below. The header reads NEDERLANDSCH OOST-INDIEN across the top panel.
Obverse lettering NEDERLANDSCH OOST-INDIEN
RECEPIS.
100.
HONDERD GULDEN.
تند سراتس رڤيه
តាមររាប់ស្រៃចាញ់ដំារារ
100
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Comments

De Javasche Bank, established in Batavia in 1828 as the Netherlands East Indies' central bank, issued Gulden Recepis notes as provisional receipts — technically interim instruments, not permanent currency. The "Recepis" denomination class circulated in a colonial economy where specie was chronically scarce and the bank's ability to redeem notes in silver was frequently strained.

The 1846 date places this note squarely within a difficult decade for the bank's liquidity, following the enormous fiscal drain of the Cultivation System on the colonial government's cash reserves. Survivors in any condition are genuinely rare; the tropical climate of Java was merciless on paper, and most circulated examples simply did not survive the humidity.

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