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| 正面描述 | The note is framed by an elaborate dark engraved border composed of intricate scrollwork and foliate ornaments in a letterpress style typical of early Argentine provincial issues. Within the frame, the denomination CINCO PESOS appears in bold lettering at the upper left, followed by a handwritten serial number to the right. Two lines of printed text in Spanish constitute the body of the note, with a warning legend printed in smaller type along the lower margin. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse appears to be plain, with no printed design, vignette, or lettering, consistent with the simple production methods used for early Argentine provincial emergency issues of this period. |
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Corrientes was one of the few Argentine provinces that persistently issued its own paper currency well into the mid-nineteenth century, operating in effective financial isolation from Buenos Aires for extended periods. This 1841 emission predates the Confederación's attempts to impose monetary order and reflects the province's insistence on managing its own fiscal affairs during the turbulent Rosas years — when the interior provinces alternately aligned with and resisted porteño dominance.
Provincial paper from this period was notoriously short-lived in circulation, degrading rapidly in the subtropical Litoral climate. Survivors in any condition are genuinely uncommon.