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| 正面描述 | Pink and black note with a portrait vignette of a young woman in the lower-left quadrant, framed by an oval border. Large red guilloche numeral "100" overprinted at centre, with the bank title "THE NATIONAL BANK OF AUSTRALASIA" across the top. Denomination panels reading "ONE HUNDRED" appear at lower left and right; branch overprint "MELBOURNE" and state inscription "VICTORIA" visible at foot. |
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| 变体 | P#A126a - overprint on Melbourne P#A126b - overprint on Perth |
| 备注 |
The National Bank of Australasia was a private trading bank, not a central bank, and its right to issue notes was progressively curtailed following the Australian Notes Act of 1910 — the same year assigned to this piece. That Act transferred the note-issuing monopoly to the Commonwealth government, effectively ending private bank currency in Australia. Notes already in circulation or held in reserve were gradually withdrawn; a £100 denomination would have seen almost no hand-to-hand use under any circumstances, given the purchasing power involved.
Survivors at this denomination are exceptionally rare. The combination of face value, political timing, and the bank's subsequent absorption into other institutions left very few examples to find their way into collections.