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Honduras’s earliest fiscal paper belongs to a rare category within Central American numismatics: manuscript treasury notes issued before organized national banknote systems existed. In the decades following independence, the country faced chronic shortages of coin and relied heavily on short-term government credit instruments to keep the economy functioning. These papers were not “banknotes” in the modern sense but direct obligations of the Treasury, redeemable at revenue offices and circulated locally as money.

The 1860s and 1870s issues — including the Vale de Hacienda (Treasury Bonds) and the manuscript Billetes de Tesorería — were written on official watermarked paper, validated with embossed and ink seals, and signed by ministers, intendentes and contador-generals. These documents reveal how the state financed military needs, administrative costs and regional obligations during a period of political instability and limited monetary infrastructure. Local revenue offices (notably Comayagua, Choluteca and Tegucigalpa) functioned as both tax collectors and de facto banks.

Surviving examples are extremely scarce. The fragile paper, heavy manuscript use, and tropical climate meant that most issues were redeemed, destroyed, or consumed by everyday handling. For collectors and researchers, these pieces provide a view into Honduras’s pre-banknote monetary system — a world of provisional credit, manuscript endorsements and regional fiscal practice long before standardized engraved currency arrived in the late 19th century.

The selections below highlight intact treasury pieces rather than fragments or archival extracts. Use the filters above to explore additional early Honduran fiscal materials as the section expands to include emergency issues, revenue-office endorsements, and the transition from manuscript treasury notes to engraved national banknotes.

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Honduras 1863 five pesos treasury vale de hacienda with national seal and manuscript signatures, Pick 7

Honduras 1863 — 5 Pesos Treasury Bond Vale de Hacienda República Libre, Soberano e Independiente (Pick 7)

This 5 Pesos vale de hacienda was issued by the Republic of Honduras under the decree of 2 March 1863 and represents one of the earliest surviving treasury obligations of the Honduran republic. During the mid-nineteenth century Honduras lacked a formal banking system and frequently relied on treasury vales such as this to finance government operations and supplement the limited supply of metallic currency. The document prominently displays the national seal of the 'República de Honduras Libre, Soberano e Independiente', featuring the triangular emblem with radiant sun and landscape motif adopted after independence. ... Read more →

HondurasTreasury Bond (Vale de Hacienda)18635 PesosUncertified (Manuscript Signed, Cancelled) Treasury BondVale de HaciendaFiscal CertificateGovernment ObligationManuscript SignedRepublica de Honduras Libre Soberano e IndependienteHonduras National SealCentral American Fiscal HistoryEarly Republican FinanceHonduras18635 PesosPick 7CancelledRedeemed Treasury InstrumentMuseum Grade
Held
Honduras 1873 5 Pesos Billete de Tesoreria Comayagua Unlisted

Honduras 1873 — 5 Pesos Treasury Note (Billete de Tesoreria, Comayagua, Unlisted Issue)

Original 5 Pesos Billete de Tesoreria issued by the Republic of Honduras at Comayagua and dated April 20, 1873. The printed text makes it payable to bearer against the national Treasury under the decree of March 18 of the same year, a stop-gap fiscal instrument used in place of scarce coin. Handwritten signatures and multiple official seals are present. ... Read more →

HondurasTreasury Note (Billete de Tesoreria)18735 PesosUncertified (Manuscript Signed, Endorsed/Converted) HondurasBillete de TesoreriaTreasury NoteFiscal NoteUnlistedPick Unlisted5 Pesos1873ComayaguaHandwrittenEndorsedConverted to BanknotesEarly Central AmericaNumismatic HistoryEducational
Held
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