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100 Incas

Issuer República del Perú
Year 1881
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Value 100 Incas (100)
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Obverse description Blue letterpress printing on white paper. A seated allegorical male figure (Mercury) occupies the left vignette, with a seated allegorical female figure at right; a condor appears at top center. The face value and issuing authority legends are arranged within the central text panel.
Obverse lettering REPÚBLICA DEL PERÚ
pagará al portador
CIEN INCAS
en moneda de oro
conforme al supremo decreto de Octubre, 18 de 1880
1881, Setiembre 1º LIMA
100
(Translation: Republic of Perú
Will pay to bearer
One Hundred Incas in golden coins
according to Supreme Decree from October 18th., 1880.
September 1st., 1881, Lima.)
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Comments

The Inca denomination series was introduced by the Perú provisional government during the War of the Pacific, when Chilean forces occupied Lima and the country's financial infrastructure had effectively collapsed. Issuing paper currency under occupation required a functional printing operation, and the Eugenio Abele firm — a Lima-based typographic house rather than a specialist banknote printer — was one of the few available options. The result is a note produced with commercial printing equipment, not the intaglio presses of London or Paris.

The "Inca" as a monetary unit was short-lived, tied entirely to the emergency conditions of 1881–1882 and never adopted into Peru's permanent currency structure.

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