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| 正面铭文 | Lit.B 50 INTERNATIONALE BANK IN LUXEMBURG zahlt dem Inhaber dieser Banknote FÜNFZIG MARK DEUTSCHE REICHSWAEHRUNG LUXEMBURG, den 1. Juli 1900. 50 MARK 50 MARK NACHAHMUNG UND FAELSCHUNG WERDEN NACH DEN BESTEHENDEN GESETZEN BESTRAFT. (Translation: International Bank of Luxembourg pays to the bearer of this banknote Fifty Marks German Empire Currency Luxembourg, July 1, 1900. 50 Mark 50 Mark Imitation and counterfeiting are punished under existing laws.) |
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| 背面铭文 | INTERNATIONALE BANK MARK 50 FÜNFZIG MARK IN LUXEMBURG MARK 50 50 MARK (Translation: International Bank Fifty Mark in Luxembourg Mark 50 50 Mark) |
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The Internationale Bank in Luxemburg was established in 1856 and operated as one of the Grand Duchy's primary commercial banks during a period when Luxembourg's monetary situation was genuinely complicated — the country used both Belgian francs and German marks interchangeably, reflecting its dual economic pull toward both Brussels and Berlin. A mark-denominated issue from a Luxembourg bank at the turn of the century signals orientation toward the German customs union, the Zollverein, of which Luxembourg remained a member until 1919.
Giesecke & Devrient had been printing high-security banknotes from Leipzig since 1852 and were the dominant continental supplier by 1900. Pick 5 is among the scarcer pieces from this issuer; the bank was absorbed and its note-issuing rights extinguished well before World War One disrupted the region entirely.