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5 Pounds Palestine Saving Bond

Issuer Higher Nile Valley Authority for the Rescue of Palestine
Year 1948
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Shape Rectangular
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Obverse description Portrait vignette of King Farouk of Egypt set within a circular frame at upper centre, flanked by two medallions bearing the numeral 5. Elaborate arabesque guilloche border frames the entire face, with calligraphic Arabic legends arranged in decorative cartouches across the centre. A large red circular official stamp overprint appears at upper left, and two manuscript signatures appear at lower centre.
Obverse lettering هيئة وادى النيل العليا لأنقاد فلسطين
المعتمدة من وزارة الشئون الاجتماعية
التوزيع الأول
رقم
٥
أعضاء رئيس الهيئة
أعضاء أمين الصندوق
من حضرة
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Comments

The "Higher Nile Valley Authority for the Rescue of Palestine" was not a central bank or government treasury — it was one of several pan-Arab fundraising bodies that emerged in early 1948 to finance Palestinian Arab resistance as the British Mandate collapsed. These saving bonds were subscription instruments, not circulating currency, issued to Arab donors rather than deployed as transactional money. Whether any meaningful redemption mechanism ever existed behind them is doubtful.

Cairo was the organizational and printing hub for much of this activity, and several competing bodies issued similar paper during the same months, creating genuine attribution headaches for collectors today.

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