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| 正面描述 | The central vignette presents the equestrian monument to Generalissimo Alexander Vasilyevich Suvorov (1730–1800), founder of Tiraspol, set against a multicolour guilloche underprint. The denomination numeral '50' appears in the upper left and lower right corners, with the note text rendered in three scripts — Russian, Romanian (Moldovan), and Ukrainian — across the upper and lower margins. Intricate guilloche borders frame the entire composition. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is dominated by a vignette of the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) building of Transnistria in Tiraspol, enclosed within guilloche border ornaments. The denomination numeral '50' appears in the upper right and lower left corners, with the value spelled out in Cyrillic along the lower margin. An anti-counterfeiting warning inscription runs along the bottom edge. |
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Transnistria's breakaway status following the 1992 war with Moldova left it operating outside any internationally recognized banking framework. The Transnistrian Republican Bank issued this series as a functional currency for a state that no government outside a handful of post-Soviet allies would formally acknowledge — and Goznak, the Russian state printer in Moscow, produced it, a detail that speaks plainly about where Tiraspol's political alignments sat in the early 1990s.
The 1993 ruble series replaced provisional coupon money and circulated alongside Russian rubles at a fixed rate until Transnistria introduced its own monetary reforms later in the decade.