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50 Rupees No Date

Uitgever Reserve Bank of India
Jaar 1997-2002
Type Log in om details te zien
Waarde 50 Rupees (50 INR)
Valuta Log in om details te zien
Samenstelling Log in om details te zien
Afmetingen Log in om details te zien
Vorm Log in om details te zien
Drukker Log in om details te zien
Ontwerper(s) Log in om details te zien
Graveur(s) Log in om details te zien
In omloop tot Log in om details te zien
Referentie(s) Log in om details te zien
Beschrijving voorzijde Portrait of Mahatma Gandhi at right, rendered in intaglio, with his name inscribed below in both Devanagari and Latin script. At centre, a large guilloche underprint surrounds the ornate numeral '50' flanked by the denomination in Hindi. The Reserve Bank seal appears at lower right, with the Ashoka Pillar emblem at lower left, and the issuer's name in Hindi and English across the top.
Opschrift voorzijde Log in om details te zien
Beschrijving keerzijde Log in om details te zien
Opschrift keerzijde Log in om details te zien
Handtekening(en) without plate letter - C. Rangarajan
without plate letter - Bimal Jalan
Plate letter A - Bimal Jalan
Plate letter R - Bimal Jalan
Plate letter E - Bimal Jalan
Plate letter L - Bimal Jalan
Plate letter A - Reddy
Plate letter E - Reddy
Plate letter F - Reddy
Plate letter L - Reddy
Plate letter R - Reddy
Beveiligingstype Log in om details te zien
Beschrijving beveiliging Log in om details te zien
Varianten Log in om details te zien
Opmerkingen

Pick 90 spans an unusually long issue window, with C. Rangarajan's signature appearing on the earliest examples and Y.V. Reddy's on the latest — three successive RBI governors across roughly a decade of continuous production. The plate letter variants (A, E, F, L, R) reflect the scale of printing required to supply a country where ₹50 was a genuinely working denomination, not a collector curiosity.

Bimal Jalan governed the RBI through the 2001 Indian parliamentary attack and subsequent economic turbulence, periods that accelerated currency demand. The no-plate-letter issues under both Rangarajan and Jalan are the earliest printings and marginally harder to locate in used but intact condition, as heavy circulation took its toll on notes from this period.

MISSCHIEN OOK INTERESSANT