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200 Slovenských Korún

Issuer Národná Banka Slovenska
Year 2006
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Printer Österreichische Banknoten- und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH (OeBS)
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Obverse lettering NÁRODNÁ BANKA SLOVENSKA
DVESTO SLOVENSKÝCH KORÚN
ANTON BERNOLÁK
200
Reverse description The reverse presents a detailed intaglio panoramic vignette of Trnava — a historic Slovak city associated with Bernolák — rendered in violet, green, and grey tones, with Gothic and Baroque church spires dominating the skyline. The large numeral '200' appears at upper right in bold letterpress, and the Slovak national coat of arms (double cross on a tripartite hill) is shown at lower right within the cityscape composition. The issuer name 'NÁRODNÁ BANKA SLOVENSKA' is printed vertically along the right margin, and a diagonal multicolour security stripe echoes that of the obverse.
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Slovakia's 200 Koruna series was among the last acts of the koruna as a currency — the Slovak Republic adopted the euro on 1 January 2009, making all post-2006 koruna issues effectively short-lived. This note was printed in Vienna by OeBS, the Austrian national printer, a longstanding arrangement that reflects the limited domestic security printing infrastructure Slovakia maintained after independence in 1993.

The optically variable stripe rather than a standard OVD patch was an upgrade introduced to counter counterfeiting pressure the series had faced in earlier years.

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