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200 Korún Millennium

Issuer Národná Banka Slovenska
Year 2000
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Designer(s) Jozef Bubák
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Reverse description The reverse presents an engraved panoramic cityscape of Trnava as it appeared in the 18th century, reflecting its historic architectural character as a major ecclesiastical centre of the region, historically known as Parva Roma — Little Rome — for its concentration of churches and religious institutions. The composition is rendered in a classical intaglio style with fine line engraving conveying architectural detail across the urban skyline. The designer's and engraver's credits appear in the lower margin alongside the issuing authority inscription.
Reverse lettering Národná Banka Slovenska J. BUBÁK DEL. V. FAJT SC.
(Translation: National Bank of Slovakia)
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Comments

This note was issued specifically to mark the millennium, making it one of the few Slovak commemorative issues that entered full general circulation rather than being sold only in collector folders. Václav Fajt was among the most accomplished banknote engravers working in the former Czechoslovak tradition, and his hand-engraved intaglio work on this series is consistently finer than the photographic reproduction techniques that were already displacing traditional engraving across European central banks by this point.

Pick 37 is the standard circulating version; a separately packaged collector edition was also produced, and the two are sometimes conflated in dealer stock.

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