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{{Refimprove|date=October 2007}}
The '''Series A banknotes''' ({{langx|ga|Nótaí bainc sraith A}}) were the first ] created by and for the ] in 1928<ref name=CBI_A>Central Bank of Ireland: </ref> and continued to be issued when the Free State became the ]. They are considered to "count amongst the most iconic and beautiful of all modern banknotes."<ref name=Spink>Spink Special Features: </ref> The series is known as "The ] Series", from the prominent portrait on the front of the notes.{{r|CBI_A}} The notes were issued from 1928 to 1977 until they were gradually replaced by ] beginning in 1976.<ref name=CBI_B>Central Bank of Ireland: </ref> However, as no £100 note was issued in Series B, the Series A £100 note remained in use until replaced by the ] note in 1996.<ref name=CBI_C>Central Bank of Ireland: </ref>
The '''Series A Banknotes''' ({{lang-ga|Nótaí bainc sraith A}}) were introduced by the ] in ] and were the first ] created by and for the state; the series continued to be issued when the Free State became the ]. The notes served from 1928 to 1977 and were replaced by ].
{{main|Banknotes of the Republic of Ireland}}


==Banknotes== ==Banknotes==
The ] of the Irish Free State prescribed the design of the notes and received advice from an advisory commission. ], Limited, ] printed the notes on behalf of the commission. The series consists of seven notes. The ] of the Irish Free State prescribed the design of the notes and received advice from an advisory commission. ], Limited, ] printed the notes on behalf of the commission. The series consists of notes in seven denominations: 10s, £1, £5, £10, £20, £50 and £100.{{r|CBI_A}}


]
The predominant theme on the notes is the ] which are depicted as heads taken from ] in ]. Rivers in both the ] and ] were chosen and there is some uncertainty as to what rivers were chosen on particular denominations.
Each note has a portrait of ] – wife of the artist ], who was commissioned to design this feature. The original oil on canvas painting of Lady Lavery, titled ''Portrait of Lady Lavery as Kathleen Ni Houlihan'' (1927), is displayed at the ] on loan from the ].<ref name=Portrait></ref> From the description of Lady Lavery's portrait at the National Gallery:


{{Blockquote
The Currency Commission notes were printed with ''Currency Commission/Coimisiún Airgid Reatha'' and ''Irish Free State/Saorstát Éireann'' with facsmiles of the signatures of the ''Chairman of the Currency Commission/Cathaoirleach Choimisiúin an Airgid Reatha'' and of the ''Secretary of the Department of Finance/Rúnaí na Roinne Airgid''. When the ] had legal effect ''Ireland'' was substituted for Irish Free State, ''Éire'' for Saorstát Éireann.
|text=In 1927, Lavery agreed to assist the Currency Commission in the design of the first Free State banknotes. Reworking a portrait of his wife Hazel of 1909, he cast her as ], the mythical heroine of ] ] of 1902, and placed her against a view of the ]. The artist later quoted ], ], as saying of the banknotes: ‘Every Irishman, not to mention the foreigner who visits Ireland, will carry one next to his heart’.{{r|Portrait}}
}}


]
In 1943 additional changes were made when the gave legal effect. The Currency Commission was replaced with '']/Banc Ceannais na hÉireann'' on the notes and the signature of the chairman was replaced with that of ''Governor/An Ghobharnóir''.
]
The banknote design placed the portrait on the left of the banknotes, so the image from the painting was reversed to face right. The full portrait appears on the larger £10, £20, £50 and £100 notes but is reduced to a head and shoulders version on the smaller 10s, £1 and £5 notes. The head from the portrait was later used as a watermark on the ] and ] until 2002.{{r|Spink}}


The watermark on all Series A banknotes is the "Head of ]"{{r|CBI_A}} taken from the statue, ''] with the Bust of ]'' (1844), sculpted in Rome by ] and brought to Ireland in 1846.<ref name=Statue>UCD Digital Library: </ref> The statue depicts Ireland, represented by the allegorical female figure of Hibernia, also known as “Erin”, with her arm around a bust of Lord Cloncurry. Hogan modeled the female figure after his Italian wife, Cornelia Bevignani.{{r|Spink}} This statue is considered by some authorities to be Hogan’s masterpiece.<ref name=Turpin>{{Citation
Banknotes produced during the ] were overprinted with different letters so that particular batches could be identified and removed from circulation if they were lost in transit between the printers in Britain and Dublin. Notes issued on and from 1961 no longer bore the promise of exchange in London. In 1971 the £1, £5 and £10 received the addition of a metal security thread.
| last = Turpin
| first = John
| title = John Hogan in Dublin
| journal = Dublin Historical Record
| volume = 34
| issue = 1
| pages = 2-14
| date = 1980
| url = https://www.jstor.org/stable/30104219
| jstor = 30104219}}</ref> and "one of the finest examples of Irish ] sculpture".{{r|Statue}} The statue is in the collection of ] and is located at Belfield House.{{r|Statue}}


The reverse of each denomination features the head of a "River God" representing one of the ] taken from a keystone on ] in ] sculpted by ].<ref name=Healy>Heads of the River Gods from the Custom House are identified in {{cite book
Each note has a portrait of a woman on the obverse, believed to be ] – wife of the artist Sir ], who was commissioned to design this feature. Each note also contains a watermark of the ].
|last=Healy
|first=Elizabeth
|date=1998
|title=The Wolfhound Guide to The River Gods
|location=Dublin
|publisher=Wolfhound Press
|isbn=0-86327-642-3
}} Healy's identifications are taken from {{Citation
| last = Leask
| first = Harold G.
| title = Dublin Custom House: The Riverine Sculptures
| journal = The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland
| volume = 75
| issue = 4
| pages = 187-194
| date = 1945
| url = http://www.jstor.org/stable/25510525
| jstor = 25510525}}.</ref> Rivers in both the ] and ] were chosen.{{r|Spink}}


The Currency Commission notes were printed with ''Currency Commission/Coimisiún Airgid Reatha'' and ''Irish Free State/Saorstát Éireann'' with facsimiles of the signatures of the ''Chairman of the Currency Commission/Cathaoirleach Choimisiúin an Airgid Reatha'' and of the ''Secretary of the Department of Finance/Rúnaí na Roinne Airgid''. When the ] had legal effect ''Ireland'' was substituted for Irish Free State, ''Éire'' for Saorstát Éireann.
{|class="wikitable" align="center" style="font-size: 90%"

|+ <big>Series A (1928&ndash;1977)</big>
In 1943 additional changes were made when the Central Bank Act of 1942<ref name=Act>Irish Statute Book: </ref> gave legal effect. The Currency Commission was replaced with '']/Banc Ceannais na hÉireann'' on the notes and the signature of the chairman was replaced with that of ''Governor/An Ghobharnóir''.
! Image !! Value !! Dimensions,<br />millimetres !! Main Colour !! Reverse Design !! Issued !! Withdrawn

Banknotes produced during the ] were overprinted with different letters so that particular batches could be identified and removed from circulation if they were lost in transit between the printers in Britain and Dublin. The promise of exchange in London was removed from the notes in 1961. A metal security thread was added to the £1, £5 and £10 notes in 1971.{{r|CBI_A}}

{|class="wikitable" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none; font-size: 90%;"
|+ <big>Series A (1928&ndash;1977){{r|CBI_A}}</big>
! Value !! Dimensions<br />(millimetres) !! Main colour !! Reverse design{{r|Healy}} !! First issued !! Last issued
|- |-
| align="center"| ]<ref>See also: ]</ref> ! 10s<ref>See also: ]</ref>
| align="center" | 138 × 78
! 10s
| align="center" | 78 × 138
| Orange | Orange
| ] in ]. | ]
| 10 September 1928 | 10 September 1928
| 6 June 1968<ref>The printing of this note ceased earlier than the rest of the series because of ], which eliminated the need for the note.</ref> | 6 June 1968<ref>The printing of this note ceased earlier than the rest of the series in preparation for ], which saw the note replaced, first by a silver 10 shilling coin and later by a 50 pence coin.</ref>
|- |-
| align="center"| ]
! £1 ! £1
| align="center"| 84 × 151 | align="center"| 151 × 84
| Green | Green
| ] (uncertain) | ]
| 10 September 1928 | 10 September 1928
| 30 September 1976 | 30 September 1976
|- |-
| align="center" | ]
! £5 ! £5
| align="center"| 92 × 165 | align="center"| 165 × 92
| Brown | Brown
| ] | ]
Line 44: Line 79:
| 5 September 1975 | 5 September 1975
|- |-
| align="center"| ]
! £10 ! £10
| align="center"| 108 × 191 | align="center"| 191 × 108
| Blue | Blue
| ] | ]
Line 52: Line 86:
| 2 December 1976 | 2 December 1976
|- |-
| align="center" | ]
! £20 ! £20
| align="center"| 114 × 203 | align="center"| 203 × 114
| Red | Red
| ] | ]
Line 60: Line 93:
| 24 March 1976 | 24 March 1976
|- |-
| align="center" | ]
! £50 ! £50
| align="center"| 114 × 203 | align="center"| 203 × 114
| Mauve | Mauve
| ] or ] | ]
| 10 September 1928 | 10 September 1928
| 4 April 1977 | 4 April 1977
|- |-
| align="center" | ]
! £100 ! £100
| align="center"| 114 × 203 | align="center"| 203 × 114
| Olive | Olive
| ] or ] | ]
| 10 September 1928 | 10 September 1928
| 4 April 1977 | 4 April 1977†
|} |}
† No £100 note was issued in ].{{r|CBI_B}} The Series A £100 note remained in use until the ] £100 note was issued in 1996.{{r|CBI_C}}

{{Gallery
|title=Heads of river gods{{r|Healy}} on the reverse of Series A banknote denominations
|width=160 | height=200
|align=center
|captionstyle=text-align: center
|File:River_Blackwater_on_Ireland_10_Shilling_Note_of_3-1-62.png
|alt1=River Blackwater on 10s
|] on 10s
|File:River_Lee_on_Ireland_1_Pound_Note_of_30-9-76.png
|alt2=River Lee on £1
|] on £1
|File:River_Lagan_on_Ireland_5_Pound_Note_of_26-5-74.png
|alt3=River Lagan on £5
|] on £5
|File:River_Bann_on_Ireland_10_Pound_Note_of_26-9-74.png
|alt4=River Bann on £10
|] on £10
|File:River_Boyne_on_Ireland_20_Pound_Note_of_6-1-75.png
|alt5=River Boyne on £20
|] on £20
|File:River_Shannon_on_Ireland_50_Pound_Note_of_4-4-77.png
|alt6=River Shannon on £50
|] on £50
|File:River_Erne_on_Ireland_100_Pound_Note_of_4-4-77.png
|alt7=River Erne on £100
|] on £100
}}

==See also==
* ]


==Footnotes== ==Footnotes==
Line 81: Line 144:


==External links== ==External links==
* *
*

{{Portal bar|Ireland|Money|Numismatics|Republic of Ireland}}


{{Irish currency and coinage}} {{Irish currency and coinage}}


] ]
] ]

Latest revision as of 06:24, 6 November 2024

A £1 Series A banknote
A £1 Series A banknote

The Series A banknotes (Irish: Nótaí bainc sraith A) were the first banknotes created by and for the Irish Free State in 1928 and continued to be issued when the Free State became the Republic of Ireland. They are considered to "count amongst the most iconic and beautiful of all modern banknotes." The series is known as "The Lady Lavery Series", from the prominent portrait on the front of the notes. The notes were issued from 1928 to 1977 until they were gradually replaced by Series B banknotes beginning in 1976. However, as no £100 note was issued in Series B, the Series A £100 note remained in use until replaced by the Series C note in 1996.

Banknotes

The Currency Commission of the Irish Free State prescribed the design of the notes and received advice from an advisory commission. Waterlow and Sons, Limited, London printed the notes on behalf of the commission. The series consists of notes in seven denominations: 10s, £1, £5, £10, £20, £50 and £100.

Portrait of Lady Lavery as Kathleen Ni Houlihan (1927) by John Lavery

Each note has a portrait of Lady Lavery – wife of the artist Sir John Lavery, who was commissioned to design this feature. The original oil on canvas painting of Lady Lavery, titled Portrait of Lady Lavery as Kathleen Ni Houlihan (1927), is displayed at the National Gallery of Ireland on loan from the Central Bank of Ireland. From the description of Lady Lavery's portrait at the National Gallery:

In 1927, Lavery agreed to assist the Currency Commission in the design of the first Free State banknotes. Reworking a portrait of his wife Hazel of 1909, he cast her as Kathleen ni Houlihan, the mythical heroine of W.B. Yeats’s play of 1902, and placed her against a view of the lakes of Killarney. The artist later quoted W.T. Cosgrave, President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State, as saying of the banknotes: ‘Every Irishman, not to mention the foreigner who visits Ireland, will carry one next to his heart’.

Portrait of Lady Lavery on a 10 pound Series A banknote
Reduced version of Lady Lavery's portrait on a 5 pound Series A banknote

The banknote design placed the portrait on the left of the banknotes, so the image from the painting was reversed to face right. The full portrait appears on the larger £10, £20, £50 and £100 notes but is reduced to a head and shoulders version on the smaller 10s, £1 and £5 notes. The head from the portrait was later used as a watermark on the Series B and Series C banknotes until 2002.

The watermark on all Series A banknotes is the "Head of Erin" taken from the statue, Hibernia with the Bust of Lord Cloncurry (1844), sculpted in Rome by John Hogan and brought to Ireland in 1846. The statue depicts Ireland, represented by the allegorical female figure of Hibernia, also known as “Erin”, with her arm around a bust of Lord Cloncurry. Hogan modeled the female figure after his Italian wife, Cornelia Bevignani. This statue is considered by some authorities to be Hogan’s masterpiece. and "one of the finest examples of Irish neoclassical sculpture". The statue is in the collection of University College Dublin and is located at Belfield House.

The reverse of each denomination features the head of a "River God" representing one of the rivers of Ireland taken from a keystone on the Custom House in Dublin sculpted by Edward Smyth. Rivers in both the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland were chosen.

The Currency Commission notes were printed with Currency Commission/Coimisiún Airgid Reatha and Irish Free State/Saorstát Éireann with facsimiles of the signatures of the Chairman of the Currency Commission/Cathaoirleach Choimisiúin an Airgid Reatha and of the Secretary of the Department of Finance/Rúnaí na Roinne Airgid. When the Constitution of Ireland had legal effect Ireland was substituted for Irish Free State, Éire for Saorstát Éireann.

In 1943 additional changes were made when the Central Bank Act of 1942 gave legal effect. The Currency Commission was replaced with Central Bank of Ireland/Banc Ceannais na hÉireann on the notes and the signature of the chairman was replaced with that of Governor/An Ghobharnóir.

Banknotes produced during the Second World War were overprinted with different letters so that particular batches could be identified and removed from circulation if they were lost in transit between the printers in Britain and Dublin. The promise of exchange in London was removed from the notes in 1961. A metal security thread was added to the £1, £5 and £10 notes in 1971.

Series A (1928–1977)
Value Dimensions
(millimetres)
Main colour Reverse design First issued Last issued
10s 138 × 78 Orange River Blackwater 10 September 1928 6 June 1968
£1 151 × 84 Green River Lee 10 September 1928 30 September 1976
£5 165 × 92 Brown River Lagan 10 September 1928 5 September 1975
£10 191 × 108 Blue River Bann 10 September 1928 2 December 1976
£20 203 × 114 Red River Boyne 10 September 1928 24 March 1976
£50 203 × 114 Mauve River Shannon 10 September 1928 4 April 1977
£100 203 × 114 Olive River Erne 10 September 1928 4 April 1977†

† No £100 note was issued in Series B. The Series A £100 note remained in use until the Series C £100 note was issued in 1996.

Heads of river gods on the reverse of Series A banknote denominations

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Central Bank of Ireland: Series A (1928 - 1975 / 77) “The Lady Lavery Series”
  2. ^ Spink Special Features: The Story of Hazel, Lady Lavery: The woman behind the banknote classic
  3. ^ Central Bank of Ireland: Series B (1976/82 - 1989/ 93)
  4. ^ Central Bank of Ireland: Series C (1992/96 – 2000)
  5. ^ Portrait of Lady Lavery at the National Gallery of Ireland
  6. ^ UCD Digital Library: Hibernia with the bust of Lord Cloncurry
  7. Turpin, John (1980), "John Hogan in Dublin", Dublin Historical Record, 34 (1): 2–14, JSTOR 30104219
  8. ^ Heads of the River Gods from the Custom House are identified in Healy, Elizabeth (1998). The Wolfhound Guide to The River Gods. Dublin: Wolfhound Press. ISBN 0-86327-642-3. Healy's identifications are taken from Leask, Harold G. (1945), "Dublin Custom House: The Riverine Sculptures", The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 75 (4): 187–194, JSTOR 25510525.
  9. Irish Statute Book: Central Bank Act, 1942
  10. See also: Irish ten shilling coin
  11. The printing of this note ceased earlier than the rest of the series in preparation for decimalisation, which saw the note replaced, first by a silver 10 shilling coin and later by a 50 pence coin.

External links

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