Hi,
Can anybody say what is this?
Thanks!
Dude in image (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Yat-sen) is common face for Republic of China notes before money reform in 1948.
13 million yuan value does not look right. Year 63 would put it around 1974.
Looks like you have piece of paper that is made to look like non-existent nomination of ROC's gold yuan.
tokul
Dude in image (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Yat-sen) is common face for Republic of China notes before money reform in 1948.
13 million yuan value does not look right. Year 63 would put it around 1974.
Looks like you have piece of paper that is made to look like non-existent nomination of ROC's gold yuan.
It's actually ROC Year 36th (1947).
I agreed with you on the note. It is very unusual that they would have issued a note that has a face value of 1.30 million yuan. I have written to a friend of mine and I am waiting for a reply.
ahkai
It's actually ROC Year 36th (1947).
Google translate read numbers in wrong direction. Should have realized that when they spew garbage number on obverse.
tokul
Dude in image (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Yat-sen) is common face for Republic of China notes before money reform in 1948.
13 million yuan value does not look right. Year 63 would put it around 1974.
Looks like you have piece of paper that is made to look like non-existent nomination of ROC's gold yuan.
Yes I noted its legit look and a SN# but the digits on the back are all bizarre. Its quality is definitely better than some piece of hell money.
Could it be a contemporary fake? Are there more examples of such fakes?
I would suspect that it was some joke money and try to figure Chinese texts, if I knew the language. Can't find such fakes in exonumia.
If counterfeiter though that he can print 13 million note and pay with it, their grandson is probably designing gouchi bags.
tokul
ahkai
It's actually ROC Year 36th (1947).
Google translate read numbers in wrong direction. Should have realized that when they spew garbage number on obverse.
It's the way the text is read, from Right to Left. All RoC's notes are printed this way and they (Taiwan) only swap this over (L-R) in the 1999 T$50 polymer commemorative series. For China, they changed this when they issued the 1953 series.
Thanks
Just received a message from an overseas collector and confirmed that this is a 'home made' note.
CUSTOMS GOLD UNITS the maximum face value of is 250000 yuan, and the paper on this banknote is also incorrect and in modern format
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