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p05_0008 - 20 Dollars - 20 Piastres Spécimen FRENCH INDOCHINA Saïgon 1876 P.022s

20 Dollars - 20 Piastres Spécimen FRENCH INDOCHINA Saïgon 1876 P.022s AU
20 Dollars - 20 Piastres Spécimen FRENCH INDOCHINA Saïgon 1876 P.022s AU20 Dollars - 20 Piastres Spécimen FRENCH INDOCHINA Saïgon 1876 P.022s AU
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Item sold on our e-shop
Price : 1 500.00 €
Face Value : 20 Dollars - 20 Piastres Spécimen
Date: (1876)
Period/Provinces/Banks Banque de l'Indochine
French City Saïgon
Catalogue reference : P.022s
Additional reference : KM.104
Signatures : Édouard Delessert imprimée
Detailed grade description : Petit manque en coin

Commentary


Specimen non daté ni perforé, imprimé en bleu sur papier vert non filigrané, numéroté A.0 / 000. Nous ne connaissons pas ce billet en émis non annulé, le spécimen est donc de première importance. Numéro de caissier 14, au verso à l'encre noire.

Historical background


FRENCH INDOCHINA

French Indochina is part of the former French colonial empire, creation of the colonial administration, bringing together several territories: the protectorates of Tonkin and Annam and the colony of Cochinchina, grouped together from 1949 within the State of Vietnam, the French Protectorate of Laos and the French Protectorate of Cambodia. The Indochinese Union is created by the union of different territories of Southeast Asia colonized or passed under French protectorate during the 19th century. In the 20th century, the various Vietnamese independence movements gained in power: during the Second World War, the weakening of the metropolis and the occupation of Indochina by the Empire of Japan, put an end to the French colonial administration. March 9, 1945 (in July 1945 in Cochinchina). The power vacuum at the end of the war allows the Việt Minh, the Vietnamese independence movement led by the Indochinese Communist Party, to take over the north of the country. Attempts to reconcile and reform the status of Indochina failed and resulted in the Indochina War in 1946.. Faced with the political and military stalemate, France had to resolve to abandon Indochina, whose Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian components saw their independence recognized by the Geneva Accords of 1954, which also formalized the partition of Vietnam, like the wanted the Americans and the Chinese.

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