Slovenia 10 tolarjev |
10 tolarjev |
Slovenian banknotes 10 tolarjev 1992 Series, issued by the Bank of Slovenia (Banka Slovenije)
Slovenian tolar, Slovenian banknotes, Slovenian paper money, Slovenian bank notes, Slovenia banknotes, Slovenia paper money, Slovenia bank notesThe hand engraved portrait of the Protestant Primož Trubar is the main motif on the front of the banknote. The profile silhouette filled up with microwriting completes the image. In the centre of the left hand area of the banknote the motif of the first page of Trubar´s Abecedarium is printed by the intaglio method, and beneath it a writing quill is pictured. The watermark bears the face of Primož Trubar.
On the back of the banknote there is a reproduction of a drawing of the Ursuline Church in Ljubljana. In the upper left hand area of the banknote a motif from the New Testament is printed by the intaglio method.
Size: 120 x 60 mm
Date of issue: January 15, 1992
Put in circulation: November 27, 1992
Out of circulation: January 15, 2007
Valueless: exchangeable without time limit
Slovenian banknotes - Slovenia paper money
In 1992, the Bank of Slovenia introduced the following banknotes (10 tolarjev, 20 tolarjev, 50 tolarjev, 100 tolarjev, 200 tolarjev, 500 tolarjev, 1000 tolarjev, 5000 tolarjev, 10000 tolarjev), all of which feature notable Slovenes. The banknotes were designed by Miljenko Licul and coauthors, whereas portraits were drawn by Rudi Španzel. They were printed by the British company De La Rue on paper produced in Radeče, Slovenia.
10 tolarjev 20 tolarjev 50 tolarjev 100 tolarjev 200 tolarjev
Primož Trubar
Primož Trubar or Primož Truber (1508 – 28 June 1586) was the Protestant reformer, most known as the author of the first Slovene language printed book, the founder and the first superintendent of the Protestant Church of the Slovene Lands, notable for consolidating the Slovene language. Trubar is the key figure of Slovenian cultural history and in many aspects a major historical personality.
Trubar was born in the village of Rašica (now in the Municipality of Velike Lašče) in the Duchy of Carniola, then under the Habsburgs. In the years 1520–1521 he attended school in Rijeka, in 1522–1524 he continued his education in Salzburg. From there he went to Trieste under the tutorship of the Roman Catholic bishop Pietro Bonomo, where he got in touch with the Humanist writers, in particular Erasmus of Rotterdam. In 1527 the bishop Pietro Bonomo assigned Trubar a priest position in Loka pri Zidanem Mostu. In 1528 he enrolled at the University of Vienna, but did not complete his studies. In 1530 he returned to the Slovene Lands and became a preacher. He gradually leaned towards Protestantism and was in 1547 expelled from Ljubljana.
While a Protestant preacher in Rothenburg, Germany, he wrote first two books in Slovene, Catechismus and Abecedarium, which were published in 1550 in Tübingen, Germany. In the following years, he authored around 25 more books in Slovenian; the most important of them is the translation of the complete New Testament, which he started while living in Kempten im Allgäu. The Memmingen city archive contains some of his books in digitized form available for reading online.
Trubar died on 28 June 1586 in Derendingen, Holy Roman Empire (now part of the city of Tübingen, Germany), where he is also buried.
Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity
Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity (Slovene: Uršulinska cerkev svete Trojice), officially Holy Trinity Parish Church in Ljubljana (Župnijska cerkev svete Trojice), also Nun Church (Nunska cerkev), is a parish church in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. It is located at Slovene Street (Slovenska cesta), along the western border of Congress Square. It was built between 1718 and 1726 in the Baroque style.