See full images - free registration
Continue with Google - no registration! or register with email

Why register? Just to keep bots out of our catalog. Your email stays private - we will never share it or send you anything uninvited. We guarantee you that!

5 Rupiah

Issuer Bank Indonesia
Year 1952
Type Standard circulation banknote
Value Log in to see details
Currency Log in to see details
Composition Log in to see details
Size Log in to see details
Shape Log in to see details
Printer Log in to see details
Designer(s) Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Intaglio-printed in blue on a multicolour guilloche underprint, the obverse carries a three-quarter portrait vignette of a young Javanese woman in traditional dress and hair ornament at the left, set against fine lathe-work, with two cranes in flight rendered above the central panel. The bank name and denomination in large letterpress type are flanked by a radiating sunburst guilloche medallion, with the date 1952 below. Two facsimile signatures at the base are captioned DIREKTUR and GUBERNUR respectively, with designer and printer credits in the lower margin.
Obverse lettering Log in to see details
Reverse description Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Signature(s) Log in to see details
Protection type Watermark
Protection description Log in to see details
Variants Log in to see details
Comments

Thomas De La Rue printed the entire 1952 Indonesian series under a contract arrangement that reflected the young republic's lack of domestic printing infrastructure — Bank Indonesia had only been established in 1953, and notes like this were already in circulation before the central bank formally existed, issued under transitional authority.

Mechelse's involvement as designer is the genuinely unusual detail here. A Dutch national working for a former colonial subject state so shortly after independence was not without political friction, and his name appearing in the margins of Indonesian currency in 1952 says something about the practical compromises of decolonization that no official record quite captures.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE