Product Description
SCWPM.#67 - TBB.#B404a
Date: July 9 - 2006 - Intro: 10.01.2007.
Grade: UNC - Signature: 1
Grade: UNC - Signature: 1
Description: Colour: Violet.
Front: Map as registration device; national unity theme with tree in Tabaldia, clasped hands, watusi cattle, mountains, and camel; map.
Back: Bank logo; Presidential Palace building in Khartoum; map.
Holographic stripe. 2-mm wide windowed security thread with demetalized CBS 10 LS and Arabic text.
Watermark: Secretary bird and electrotype LS 10.
Printer: Sudan Currency Printing Press. - Size: 155 x 69 mm.
Material: Paper.
Sudan,
country located in northeastern Africa. The name Sudan derives from the Arabic expression bilād al-sūdān (“land of the blacks”), by which medieval Arab geographers referred to the settled African countries that began at the southern edge of the Sahara. For more than a century, Sudan—first as a colonial holding, then as an independent country—included its neighbour South Sudan, home to many sub-Saharan African ethnic groups. Prior to the secession of the south in 2011, Sudan was the largest African country, with an area that represented more than 8 percent of the African continent and almost 2 percent of the world’s total land area.
Front: Map as registration device; national unity theme with tree in Tabaldia, clasped hands, watusi cattle, mountains, and camel; map.
Back: Bank logo; Presidential Palace building in Khartoum; map.
Holographic stripe. 2-mm wide windowed security thread with demetalized CBS 10 LS and Arabic text.
Watermark: Secretary bird and electrotype LS 10.
Printer: Sudan Currency Printing Press. - Size: 155 x 69 mm.
Material: Paper.
Sudan,
country located in northeastern Africa. The name Sudan derives from the Arabic expression bilād al-sūdān (“land of the blacks”), by which medieval Arab geographers referred to the settled African countries that began at the southern edge of the Sahara. For more than a century, Sudan—first as a colonial holding, then as an independent country—included its neighbour South Sudan, home to many sub-Saharan African ethnic groups. Prior to the secession of the south in 2011, Sudan was the largest African country, with an area that represented more than 8 percent of the African continent and almost 2 percent of the world’s total land area.