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100 Lira İnönü

Issuer Türkiye Cumhuriyet Merkez Bankası
Year
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Size 183 × 82 mm
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Obverse lettering TÜRKİYE CÜMHURİYET MERKEZ BANKASI
TÜRK LİRASI
100
YÜZ TÜRK LİRASI
11 HAZİRAN 1930 TARİH VE 1715 NUMARALI KANUNA GÖRE ÇIKARILMIŞTIR
SERİ 00
00000
UMUM MÜDÜR
MÜDÜR
(Translation: Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, Turkish Lira, One Hundred Turkish Lira, Issued pursuant to the Law dated 11 June 1930 and numbered 1715, Series 00, General Manager, Director)
Reverse description The reverse is printed in a warm reddish-brown palette and centres on a large intaglio vignette of a coastal fortress with mountains and water in the background, consistent with a Dardanelles or Bosphorus scene. The vignette is framed by an arched panel with ornamental guilloche borders, corner medallions bearing the numeral '100', and the issuer's name in a cartouche at the top. A plain circular blank area to the right of the vignette is reserved for a watermark or embossed seal, and the denomination inscription runs along the lower border.
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Comments

Turkey's first major post-Atatürk portrait series, this note was issued under İsmet İnönü, who assumed the presidency after Atatürk's death in November 1938 and held it through the entirety of World War II — a period during which Turkey maintained a precarious neutrality while both Axis and Allied powers exerted enormous diplomatic pressure. The decision to put İnönü on the currency was itself a political act, projecting continuity and state authority at a moment of genuine domestic uncertainty.

Thomas De La Rue printed the series in London, which remained an unusual arrangement given wartime shipping risks across the Mediterranean. The single watermark is the primary security feature — a relatively minimal provision for a high denomination.

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