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| India 200 Rupees 2019 | 
| Item Code: IN-113 | 
| Front: Mohendas Karamchand "Mahatma" Gandhi (2 October 1869  30 January 1948) wearing spectacles (eyeglasses). Ashoka Chakra wheel (Dharma Chakra). Ashoka Pillar at Sanchi. Seal of the Reserve Bank of India. National Emblem of India - Lion Capital of Asoka (Ashoka column), sculpted from sandstone, preserved at Sarnath Museum which was originally erected around 250 BCE atop an Ashoka Pillar at Sarnath. The wheel "Ashoka Chakra" on it's base is a centerpiece of National Flag of India. "Satyameva Jayate" National Motto of India* is inscribed under it. Back: Great Stupa at Sanchi and its Eastern Gateway in Madhya Pradesh. Gandhi's spectacles (eyeglasses) as Swachh Bharat Abhiyan (Clean India Mission) logo with slogan. Language panel with the banknote denomination printed in 17 languages. Watermark: Mahatma Gandhi and vertical electrotype "200". Security features: Consecutively running ascending serial numbers on the front of the banknote. Watermarked paper. Coloured filament fibres (hairs) (very few in between), the serial numbers, the dotted security thread and parts of the design fluoresce while being exposed to ultraviolet light. Windowed metallic 2,5 mm wide security thread that bears repetitive demetalized text "BHARAT" (in the Devanagari script) and "RBI". EURion constellation (Omron rings or doughnuts). Microprint text. Latent image. See-through registration device. Tactile feature: There are four angular lines and two circles on each end of the obverse to enable physical identification of the note for the visually impaired and the blind people. Predominant colour: Bright yellow (Crayola). Artist: SPMCIL. Signature: Shaktikanta Das (Governor, RBI, 12-Dec-2018). Printing method: Intaglio. Issuer: Reserve Bank of India (RBI). First date of issue: 25 August 2017. Date of issue: 2019. Material: Cotton fiber paper. Printer: India Security Press in Nashik, a subsidiary unit of Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India Limited (SPMCIL). | 
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| This
        picture is for reference only. It may not be exactly the
        same image as the one for sale in the Price List or in our Store,
        and its serial | 
| Dimensions: 147 x 66 mm | 
| Texts: Reserve Bank of India. Guaranteed by the Central Government. I promise to pay the bearer the sum of Two Hundred Rupees. | 
| Remark: The National Emblem of India
        is derived from the time of the Emperor Ashoka. The
        emblem is a replica of the Lion of Sarnath, near Varanasi
        in Uttar Pradesh. The national emblem of India was
        adapted by the Government of India on 26th January 1950.
        The National emblem (out of the four lions only three
        lions are visible and the fourth one is hidden from the
        view) symbolises power, courage and confidence. It rests
        on a circular abacus. At the centre of the Abacus, there
        is a Chakra (wheel) which symbolises the Dharma Chakra
        (Eternal wheel of law). The abacus is girded by four
        smaller animals, guardians of the four directions: The
        Lion of the North, The Elephant of the East, The
        galloping Horse of the South and The Bull of the West, separated by intervening wheels over a bell shaped lotus. The word Satyameva Jayate (truth alone triumphs) have been inscribed in Devanagari script. The National emblem of India is the official seal of the President of India and Central and State Governments. The National emblem is used only for official purposes and commands highest respect and loyalty. It is also a symbol of independent India's identity and sovereignty. | 
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