Government of Ceylon, General Treasury
Value was stated in English, Sinhala & Tamil - No Interest
Rix Dollar Notes 1800-1824
Undated Printed by Government Press, Colombo
1800 : RD 25, 50, 100
1806 : Colombo ; RD 2 note
Undated Printed by Gale & Butler Engravers, London
1809 : Colombo ; RD 5, 100 notes
Undated Printed by Silvester & Co, London
1814 : Colombo ; RD 1 note, ලන්කවේ(sic)
1820 : Colombo ; RD 2, 5 notes ලංකවේ
1820-1830 : Colombo ; RD 2 note, ; With Dry Stamp
British Sterling Notes 1825-1856
1827-1850 : Colombo : Silvester & Co, London £1, £2
proofs, 5, 10, 20, 25, 50
(in English Only)
1850-1855 : Colombo : Perkins Bacon & Petch, London £1, £2, £5
notes
Private Banks : 1844 to 1884
Value was stated in English, Sinhala & Tamil
Private Bank issue of Banknotes (Unstamped Promissory Notes) with a face value of £1 and higher was authorized by Ceylon Ordinance 1844 No 23 which was replaced by Ceylon Ordinance 1861 No 2 which authorized the issue of Banknotes with a face value of 10 Shillings and higher.
The Private Bank notes issued by Branches as explicitly promised on
the note could be redeemed at that Branch that issued it and/or maybe
at the Head Quarters in Colombo. The currency note was a receipt of
coins deposited and held in the Bank Branch.
Unlike current
banknotes that can be only redeemed for more worthless pieces of
paper, which can depreciate in real value with respect to Gold or Silver.
Bank of Ceylon : 1844-1849(6)
1844 : Colombo : £1, £2, £5, £10, £20, £50 notes
The Mercantile Bank of India, London & China - Ceylon Branch Notes(1)
Printed at Batho & Co with Britannia Design
1857 : Colombo 5s, £1, £5 notes
1857 : Kandy 5s proof (in English Only)
The Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, London & China - Ceylon Branch(22)
Sterling Era : Pounds
1858-1863 Colombo - 10s, £1, £5, £10
1858 : Kandy - 5s
proof (in English Only)
1862 : Kandy - 10s
note
Printed by Perkins Bacon & Co, London, with Royal Crest Design
1864-1869 Colombo - 10s, £1, £5, £10, £50
notes
1864-1869 Kandy - 10s, £1, £5
notes
Decimal Era : Rupees
1870-1884 Colombo - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 50, Rs 100, Rs 500, Rs 1000 notes
1870-1884 Kandy - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 50 notes
1880-1884 Galle - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 100 notes
The Asiatic Banking Corporation Notes(10)
Large Uniface
1864-1866 Colombo £1, £5, £10 notes;
Kandy 10s, £1, £5, £10 notes
Smaller printed on Both faces
1864-1866 Colombo 10s note
- £1 note
Kandy 10s note
The Oriental Bank - Ceylon Branch Notes(4)
Uniface Printed by Batho & Bingley, London.
1846-1850 Colombo - 10s, £1, £5, £10
notes
The Oriental Bank Corporation(54)
Uniface undated Printed by Perkins Bacon & Petch, London.
1851-1859 Colombo - Rs 5
proof
1851-1859 Kandy - Rs 5
note
Biface dated Printed by Perkins Bacon & Co, London.
Rupees before adoption Decimal
or the equivalent in the Currency of the Island
1860-1869 Colombo - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
- Rs 50, Rs 100, Rs 1000
notes
1860-1869 Kandy - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1864-1869 Jaffna - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1864-1869 Badulla - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1866-1869 Galle - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
- Rs 50, Rs 100
notes
1860-1869 Ceylon - Rs 5
proof
Biface dated after Decimal Rupee Currency
1870-1880 Colombo - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
- Rs 100
note
1870-1880 Kandy - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1870-1880 Badulla - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1870-1880 Galle - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1870-1880 Haldamulla - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1876-1880 Ceylon - Rs 5, Rs 10
proofs (for Newera Ellia)
Biface dated Printed by Bradbury Wilkinson & Co Engravers &c. London.
1881-1884 Colombo - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 50, Rs 100
notes
1881-1884 Kandy - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 100
notes
1881-1884 Jaffna - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1881-1884 Badulla - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
1881-1884 Galle - Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 50
notes
1881-1884 Haldamulla - Rs 5
notes
1881-1884 Newera Ellia - Rs 5, Rs 10
notes
Jonathan Callaway (3575-R) of Scotland posted on 2020 Apr 03 in IBNS forum Perkins Bacon, a major printer of banknotes in the 19th century, first introduced a blue ink option in the early 1860s and it was offered as a way to deter forgers using the still relatively new method of photography to counterfeit banknotes. In the early years Perkins Bacon were required to re-print some notes and ended up making several changes to the ink's ingredients in order to address the problem of colour stability. They also tried changing the paper the notes were printed on but they and the banks stuck with blue and red. One problem was that the blue ink turned too dark, almost black on occasion, possibly due to oxidization and some variations in the shade of blue is evident in surviving notes.
Images mostly from Spink Auctions, particularly the Banknotes of Ceylon Auction in London on 2011 April 14th. This Auction listed Signed, Remainders, Specimens and Proofs of the full range of 19th century Banknotes of Ceylon issued from Banks in Colombo and all of their other branches in Ceylon. It was reported in the local media. With prices of each note exceeding £2,000 and beyond the reach of most Local collectors I had arranged with the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, to bid and try bring this collection back to Ceylon. However on the day of this Auction, the anonymous owner of collection cancelled the Auction. The first time in Spink History. Who owns this invaluable collection of Ceylon Banknotes is sadly Unknown.
I thank Thomas Hockenhull of British Museum for having the Bank of Ceylon 2 Pound note imaged and confirming it's size, Watermark and text below resolution of image posted.
I thank Claire Twinn, Global Functions Archives Manager, HSBC Holdings PLC, London for sending me the 200 dpi scan of two notes from the HSBC Collection. Reproduced with the permission of HSBC Holdings plc (HSBC Archives).
More images are found in book History of Coins and Currency in Sri
Lanka by G. P. S. H. de Silva published in 2001 Central Bank of
Sri Lanka. The book references the set of copies displayed at CBSL
Currency Museum which being colorless are probably photocopies before
the digital era obtained many years ago from HSBC Archive. These
Images printed reduced in size have about 24 dpi resolution
Image of these notes were not found online.
If available please contribute. Thanks.
Text from Auction catalog and my own observations.
It is clear after making this linked web-page that the Standard Catalog
of World Paper Money (SCWPM) Specialized Issues needs a major update.
I also curious why the Private Bank Issues from Oriental Banking
Corporation, Chartered Mercantile Bank of India London and China, and
the Asiatic Banking corporation who were the sole currency issue in
Ceylon from 1856 to 1884 are listed on in Specialized issues while the
same bank issues, for example, Hong Kong are listed in the regular
SCWPM. Any logical reason or accidental error?
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