A 1000 Córdoba banknote, which was re-printed with a value of 200,000 Córdobas during the inflationary period of the late 1980s. Scanned image of currency obtained in
Nicaragua in 1990.
Not home 18:15, 13 September 2007 (UTC)
It is unclear if this item of currency or official token is currently in circulation. Please update the use of this tag if you have this information.
This restriction tag has been placed because currency designs and images of them may be subject to additional legal restrictions outside of copyright law including laws regarding
counterfeiting, which may also apply, particularly when this image is used in printed form.
This template is not a valid license tag alone. Please accompany it with an appropriate license.
This image depicts a non-free unit of currency design and the copyright is likely held by the currency's producer. It is believed that the use of low-resolution of currency
used for the purposes of commentary or criticism relating to the image of the currency itself
where no free equivalent is available or could be created that would adequately give the same information,
Please add a detailed non-free use rationale for each article the image is used in, which must also declare compliance with the other parts of the non-free content criteria, as well as the source of the work and copyright information.
To patrollers and administrators: If this image has an appropriate rationale please append |image has rationale=yes as a parameter to the license template.
Do not use this tag if the currency and image in question are known to be either public domain or freely licensed.
If the currency design shown is in fact public domain please replace this tag with {{
PD currency}} and {{
PD currency/accepted}}, if appropriate, and an appropriate copyright tag.
Seeing this image adds to user understanding about the Nicaraguan córdoba, by showing exactly the currency was re-used at a higher denomination during the hyperinflation, a topic raised in the text of the article. Seeing the image shows the reader exactly how the currency was overprinted to physically modify it to achieve this, something real and valuable for a knowledge of the subject, that goes beyond the bare statement in text that it was overpronted.
The copyright taking this represents is very slight. Being a banknote, as an artistic work the design shown has already been massively widely circulated; it was created for a specific purpose that our use here in no way competes with; and our use here is in a very different context, ie for the purpose of providing an encyclopedic survey of the currency and its recent history, which should be considered transformative.
Since the point is to show a real overprinted banknote, this image cannot be replaced by a free one that would fulfil the same purpose. The image is already as free as it can be, in that the photographer has freely licensed their photographer's copyright (if any) in the capturing of the image.
The resolution is appropriate, to see clearly how the overprinting was done. This requires a slightly larger image, to allow the reader to clearly distinguish the original printing from the subsequent overprinting.
File history
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A 1000 Córdoba banknote, which was re-printed with a value of 200,000 Córdobas during the inflationary period of the late 1980s. Scanned image of currency obtained in
Nicaragua in 1990. ~~~~
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage
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