50 Peruvian sol note & bill

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50 Peruvian sol Front

 

50 Peruvian sol the front is  Abraham Valdelomar Pinto
50 Peruvian sol the front is Abraham Valdelomar Pinto

The main feature is the portrait of Abraham Valdelomar Pinto, writer.

Pedro Abraham Valdelomar Pinto (April 27, 1888 - November 3, 1919) was a Peruvian narrator, poet, journalist, essayist and dramatist; he is considered the founder of the avant-garde in Peru, although more for his dandy-like public poses and his founding of the journal Colónida than for his own writing, which is lyrically posmodernista rather than aggressively experimental. Like Charles Baudelaire in 19th century Paris, he claimed to have made his country aware for the first time of the relationship between poetry and the market, and to have recognized the need for the writer to turn himself into a celebrity.

He has been pictured on the Peruvian Nuevo Sol S/ 50 banknote since its introduction in 1991.

50 Peruvian sol Back

 

50 Peruvian sol the back is El Castillo\ (Templo Nuevo, Archeological complex of Chavín de Huántar, Ancash)
50 Peruvian sol the back is El Castillo\ (Templo Nuevo, Archeological complex of Chavín de Huántar, Ancash)

The main feature is the Temple Nuevo Chavín de Huántar.

Chavín de Huántar is an archaeological site in Peru, containing ruins and artifacts constructed as early as 1200 BCE and occupied by later cultures until around 400–500 BCE by the Chavín, a major pre-Inca culture. The site is located in the Ancash Region, 250 kilometers (160 mi) north of Lima, at an elevation of 3,180 meters (10,430 ft), east of the Cordillera Blanca at the start of the Conchucos Valley. Chavín de Huántar has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Some of the Chavín relics from this archaeological site are on display in the Museo de la Nación in Lima and the Museo Nacional de Chavín in Chavin itself.

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