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200 Korun

Issuer Národná Banka Slovenska
Year 1999-2006
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Obverse description Central vignette bears an intaglio portrait of Anton Bernolák, the Slovak Catholic priest and linguist celebrated as the first codifier of a literary Slovak standard. The issuer's name and denomination appear in full lettering, with the designer and engraver credits rendered in small capitals below the vignette. Guilloche underprint patterns frame the composition across the note field.
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Protection type Watermark, Security thread
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Comments

The 200 Korún was introduced in 1999 as Slovakia's middle-denomination note during a period of sustained but moderating inflation — the koruna had already been devalued once in 1993 immediately after the Czechoslovak monetary union dissolved. Fajt was a Czech engraver who worked extensively for Státní tiskárna cenin in Prague, which printed Slovak banknotes for much of the independent republic's early currency history, an arrangement that reflected post-Velvet Divorce practicalities more than either government particularly advertised.

Pick 30 spans a seven-year print run with relatively minor variation between date signatures.

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