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50 Latu

Issuer Latvijas Banka
Year 1934
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Currency Old lats (1922-1940)
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Reverse description Printed in blue intaglio on a finely worked guilloche background, the reverse carries the Latvian state coat of arms at centre top, flanked by two large circular areas reserved for the watermark and framed by ornate scrollwork with mythological figures. The numeral 50 appears in each corner, the denomination PIECDESMIT LATU is set in bold lettering across the upper zone, and a rectangular anti-counterfeiting warning panel occupies the centre. The printer's imprint appears at the lower margin.
Reverse lettering PAR LATVIJAS BANKAS NAUDAS ZĪMJU VILTOŠANU VAI VILTOTO ZĪMJU UZGLA-BĀŠANU UN IZPLATĪŠANU VAINĪGOS SODĪS SASKAŅĀ AR SODU LIKUMIEM.
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Comments

Latvia's 50 Latu of 1934 was printed by Thomas De La Rue during a politically charged moment — Kārlis Ulmanis had just dissolved parliament and assumed dictatorial powers in May of that year. The note's production in London reflected a deliberate policy of the Latvijas Banka to use high-security foreign printers, insulating currency production from domestic instability.

Pick 20 is scarcer than its lower-denomination counterparts in the series, largely because 50 Latu represented a substantial sum for most Latvians in the mid-1930s. Notes of this value circulated infrequently, yet attrition through the Soviet occupation of 1940 — which invalidated and largely destroyed Latvian currency stocks — was severe.

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