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1000 Francs - type 1817 definitive

Issuer Banque de France
Year 1817-1825
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Size 220 × 116 mm
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Reverse lettering Mille Francs 1000 Fr.
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Protection type Watermark
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Comments

The type 1817 series marked Banque de France's first sustained high-denomination issue following the disruptions of the Napoleonic period, and the institutional decision to commission Firmin Didot — better known as a typographer and punchcutter than a banknote designer — reflects how much the bank's priorities at that moment leaned toward legibility and typographic authority over decorative engraving. Andrieu's credential as a medallist rather than a conventional plate engraver is equally telling.

Over 12 million printed across eight years is a substantial run for the period, but attrition was severe: heavy use, informal destruction, and the bank's own cancellation practices have made intact survivors genuinely uncommon. The single watermark was the era's primary anti-counterfeiting measure, and it proved insufficient — forgeries circulated widely enough to alarm the Banque's directors before the series was eventually retired.

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