Chile P-135/136 1 Escudo 1962-73 Very Fine+
A beautifully engraved mid-century Chilean note pairing two of the country's most iconic historical figures — the liberator Bernardo O'Higgins on the front and the dramatic scene of Diego de Almagro's arrival in Chile on the back. Issued across more than a decade of Chilean monetary history before the escudo itself was swept away by hyperinflation.
Obverse
- Color: dark blue engraving on pale orange and tan multicolor underprint
- Portrait of Bernardo O'Higgins at center, based on the portrait by José Gil de Castro
- Face value in numeric fractions (½ / 50) at all four corners; in letters at bottom; in currency sign and numbers on sides of portrait
- Red (P-134) or black (P-134A) series and serial numbers — see Varieties below
Back
- Color: blue engraving on light-green (P-134) or beige (P-134A) underprint
- Engraving of Descubrimiento de Chile por Diego de Almagro (Discovery of Chile by Diego de Almagro) by Pedro Subercaseaux
- Inscription: LLEGADA DE ALMAGRO A CHILE (Arrival of Almagro to Chile)
- Face value in numeric fractions at all four corners; in currency sign and numbers in oval at right; in letters at bottom and around oval
Other Characteristics
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Varieties: you may receive any variety:
- P-134a — EFG + LMS₁ (Figueroa & Mackenna); Series A; red serial #
- P-134b — LMS₂ + FIB (Mackenna & Ibáñez); Series B; red serial #
- P-134Aa — SMS + FIB (Molina & Ibáñez); Series B–D; black serial #
- P-134Aa — CMA + FIB (Massad & Ibáñez); Series E–F; black serial #
- P-134Aa — AIC + JBM₁ (Inostroza & Barrios Bold); Series G; black serial #
- P-134Aa — AIC + JBM₂ (Inostroza & Barrios Thin); Series G; black serial #
- Catalog numbers: Pick P-134 / P-134A; Numista N#202813
- Watermark: Portrait (facing left) of Diego Portales (1793–1837)
- Composition: Paper
- Size: 145 × 70 mm
- Issuing entity: Central Bank of Chile (Banco Central de Chile)
- Printer: Casa de Moneda de Chile
- Demonetized: 1975 (with the escudo currency)
- Currency: Chilean Escudo (1960–1975)
The Liberator Who Freed Chile — Then Lost Everything
Bernardo O'Higgins (1778–1842) is the founding father of Chile — the man who led the decisive military campaigns that broke Spanish colonial rule and became the country's first Supreme Director. Born the illegitimate son of an Irish-born Spanish colonial governor, he was educated in England and Peru, and returned to Chile to join the independence movement. After the stunning victory at the Battle of Chacabuco in 1817, he declared Chilean independence on 12 February 1818. Yet his rule was authoritarian and divisive; he was forced to abdicate in 1823 and spent the last 20 years of his life in exile in Peru, never returning to the country he liberated. He died in Lima in 1842, and his remains were only repatriated to Chile in 1869. He appears on Chilean currency across multiple eras.
The Conquistador Who Arrived to Find Nothing
Diego de Almagro (c. 1475–1538) led the first European expedition into Chilean territory in 1535–1536, crossing the Andes from Peru through some of the most brutal terrain on Earth — the Atacama Desert and the high Andean passes in winter. He arrived expecting to find another Peru, rich in gold and silver. Instead, he found a land of fierce indigenous resistance and no obvious mineral wealth. Disappointed, he turned back. He was later executed by his former partner Francisco Pizarro in a power struggle over the spoils of the Inca conquest. The painting by Pedro Subercaseaux depicted on this note romanticizes that arrival — the moment of first contact between the Old World and what would become Chile.
About Chile
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Origin of name: Disputed — possibly from the Quechua chili (cold) or the Mapuche chilli (where the land ends); the name was in use before Spanish arrival
- Origin of name of Santiago: Named by Pedro de Valdivia in 1541 after Santiago de Compostela, patron saint of Spain; full original name was Santiago de Nueva Extremadura
- Capital: Santiago — city pop. ~6.2 million; metro pop. ~8 million
- Population: ~19.6 million (UN 2024) — roughly the size of New York State and Pennsylvania combined
- Area: 756,102 km² (291,930 mi²) — slightly larger than Texas; the world's longest and narrowest country
- GDP per capita (PPP): ~$29,000 (IMF 2024) — highest in South America
- Main exports: copper (world's largest producer), lithium, fruit, wine, fish meal, cellulose
- Borders: Peru (north), Bolivia (northeast), Argentina (east); Pacific Ocean coastline of 6,435 km
- Official/spoken languages: Spanish (official); Mapudungun and other indigenous languages spoken regionally
- Ethnicities: Mestizo and white (~95%), Mapuche (~9%), other indigenous (~1%)
- Memberships: United Nations (founding member, 1945); Organization of American States (1948); Pacific Alliance (founding member, 2011); APEC; WTO; OECD (2010)
- Sovereignty: Spanish colonial rule (1540–1818); Independence declared: 12 February 1818; Republic established: 1818–date; Military dictatorship under Pinochet (1973–1990); return to democracy 1990
Chile Unfiltered
- Chile is the world's longest country — stretching 4,300 km from the Atacama Desert in the north to Patagonia and Cape Horn in the south, but averaging only 177 km wide.
- Chile produces more copper than any other country on Earth — roughly 27% of global supply. The Escondida mine alone is the world's largest copper mine.
- The Atacama Desert is the driest non-polar desert on Earth. Some weather stations there have never recorded rainfall. Yet it blooms spectacularly in rare wet years.
- Chile has the world's largest lithium reserves — a resource now critical to electric vehicle batteries, making Chile a key player in the global energy transition.
- On 11 September 1973, a US-backed military coup overthrew democratically elected President Salvador Allende. General Augusto Pinochet ruled for 17 years, during which thousands were killed or disappeared.
- Chile is one of the most seismically active countries on Earth. The largest earthquake ever recorded — magnitude 9.5 — struck Valdivia, Chile on 22 May 1960.
- Chile controls Easter Island (Rapa Nui), home to the famous moai statues, located 3,700 km off the Chilean coast in the Pacific Ocean.
Own this note and hold two centuries of Chilean ambition in your hands — the liberator who gave everything and died in exile, the conquistador who crossed the Andes and found nothing, and the currency of a republic that would later survive dictatorship, hyperinflation, and earthquake. A remarkable piece of South American monetary history.
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World Money Store is me, Βrian Grοss, the sole proprietor of this small business, based in Washington D.C. I've spend half my adult life in The Netherlands and Mexico and have an addiction to travel, history and languages (Spanish, Dutch Russian and a few others); Arabic my current challenge. My personal instagram is @df2dc.
I've been on ebay for 22 years, and I am also on Whatnot. I put together the website myself, and do all the purchasing.
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Banknote Condition Guide (UNC, XF, VF, F etc.)
- UNC (Uncirculated): No folds/creases; full crispness/sheen. May have "half moon" at edge of security thread.
- AU (About Uncirculated): Nearly perfect, with a single light fold or handling mark that doesn't break the paper. Crisp and colorful.
- XF a.k.a. EF (Extremely Fine): Crisp, firm, bright; a few light folds or one firm crease.
- VF Plus: Minor folds/stains; white areas are bright, still not quite Extra Fine.
- VF (Very Fine): Several folds; paper firmer than average; corners lightly worn.
- VF Minus: VF but may show foxing (yellow/brown patches), thinner paper, more folds/wrinkles/small tears (1-3 mm), otherwise intact.
- F (Fine): Well-used, many folds or creases; paper is soft; some soiling and/or pen marks.
- VG (Very Good) / Limp/worn/faded with heavy creasing/edge wear/tears.