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50 Centavos large size

Issuer Caja de Conversión, Argentina
Year 1899
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Size 130 × 65 mm
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Obverse lettering República Argentina La Nación pagará al portador y a la vista 50 centavos moneda nacional LEY DE 20 DE SEPTIEMBRE 1897 CAJA DE CONVERSION
(Translation: Republic of Argentina The Nation will pay the bearer and at sight 50 cents National currency Law of September 20, 1897 Conversion Fund)
Reverse description Printed in blue and ochre. The central design is dominated by the Argentine coat of arms, flanked by laurel branch ornaments and surrounded by denomination and country inscriptions.
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The Caja de Conversión was established by Argentina's 1890 Conversion Law, a direct consequence of the Baring Crisis — the near-collapse of Barings Bank in London triggered largely by Argentine sovereign debt default. The Caja's mandate was to issue paper money backed by gold at a fixed rate, ending the chaotic era of provincial and private bank emissions that had destabilized the peso for decades.

Louis-Eugène Mouchon is better known as a stamp engraver — his work on French and colonial postage is extensively documented — making his involvement in this Argentine series an interesting crossover. The large format of this 50 Centavos was deliberately retained even as later emissions shrank, a practical nod to the note's low denomination and the need for easy visual distinction in daily use.

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