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5 Roubles

Issuer State Bank of the Russian Empire
Year 1882-1886
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Value 5 Roubles (5 Рублей)
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Obverse description The Imperial Russian arms surmounted by a crowned double-headed eagle appear at left within an elaborate circular vignette enclosing the Cyrillic monogram of Emperor Alexander III, flanked by crossed sceptres and other regalia. The central text panel carries the bank title and denomination in Cyrillic letterpress, with the large numeral '5' at right rendered in intaglio against a fine guilloche underprint. Serial numbers appear at lower left and lower right, with manuscript signatures of the Manager and Cashier below the central text.
Obverse lettering Государственный Кредитный Билетъ
По предъявлении выдается изъ металлической кассы Государственнаго Банка
Пять рублей серебромъ или золотою монетою
Управляющій
Кассиръ
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Comments

The State Bank series of the early 1880s marked a deliberate shift away from the Assignation Ruble system that had plagued Russian public finances since Catherine II. These notes were part of a broader stabilization effort under Finance Minister Nikolai Bunge, who was attempting to rationalize a currency that had been chronically over-issued and chronically distrusted. The 5 Ruble denomination was the workhorse of everyday commercial transactions — enough to matter, not enough to hoard.

Pick A50 is scarcer than its later Imperial successors, with the 1882–1886 window predating the full convertibility reforms of the 1890s under Witte. Paper quality on surviving examples is often compromised by the heavy circulation these notes absorbed before the series was retired.

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