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Brazil 50000 Cruzeiros banknote 1985 Oswaldo Cruz

Brazil money currency 50000 Cruzeiros banknote 1985 Oswaldo Cruz
Brazil Banknotes 50000 Cruzeiros banknote 1985 Palace of Manguinhos, Oswaldo Cruz Institute in Rio de Janeiro

Brazil Banknotes 50000 Cruzeiros banknote 1985 Oswaldo Cruz
Central Bank of Brazil - Banco Central do Brasil

Obverse: Portrait of Oswaldo Cruz at right. Microscope at center.
Reverse: Facade of the Neo-Mouresque Palace of Manguinhos, seat of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute in Rio de Janeiro.
Watermark: Portrait of Oswaldo Cruz.
Printer: Casa da Moeda do Brasil.
Dimensions: 154 x 73 mm
Texts: Banco Central do Brasil; Cinqüenta Mil Cruzeiros.

Brazilian Currency Banknotes - Brazil Paper Money
1981-1985 Issue


5000 Cruzeiros     10000 Cruzeiros     50000 Cruzeiros     100000 Cruzeiros




Oswaldo Cruz
Oswaldo Gonçalves Cruz, better known as Oswaldo Cruz (August 5, 1872 in São Luís do Paraitinga, São Paulo state, Brazil – February 11, 1917 in Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro state), was a Brazilian physician, bacteriologist, epidemiologist and public health officer and the founder of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute.
  He occupied the fifth chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters from 1912 until his death in 1917.

Oswaldo Cruz Institute
The Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Portuguese Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, also known as FIOCRUZ) is a scientific institution for research and development in biomedical sciences located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, it is considered one of the world's main public health research institutions. It was founded by Dr. Oswaldo Cruz, a noted physician and epidemiologist.
  The Federal Serum Therapy Institute was established with the objective of developing serum and vaccines against the bubonic plague. The institute’s activities, however, changed from simple production into research and experimental medicine, especially after Oswaldo Cruz assumed its leadership in 1902. From there on, the institute became the base for memorable sanitation campaigns in an age of outbreaks and epidemics of the bubonic plague, yellow fever, and smallpox. The Institute, however, was not confined to Rio de Janeiro and, on the contrary, collaborated in the occupation of the country’s interior through scientific expeditions, aiding in the development of the country.
  When Oswaldo Cruz died, in 1917, the Institute, which by then already bore his name, was nationally consolidated through important scientific achievements, such as Carlos Chagas’ description of the complete cycle of the American trypanosomiasis including the clinical pattern of the disease. On 16 January 2007, the Institute announced that it had developed a gel from algae which it is hoped will reduce HIV transmission to women.
  Today the institution has a broad range of responsibilities related to the health and wellbeing of the Brazilian population. This includes hospital and ambulatory care; health-related research; development of vaccines, drugs, reagents, and diagnostic kits; training of public health and health workers; and providing information and communications related to health, science, and technology. The Fiocruz workforce members are over 7,500. Fiocruz includes several fixed facilities in Rio de Janeiro and other locations; however, it contributes to improving health throughout the country, through its support to the Sistema Único de Saúde (Unified Health System, the Brazilian public health system), its proposals on public health policy-making, its research activities, its scientific expeditions, and the reach of its health services and products.
  Fiocruz is one of the founding members of the International Association of National Public Health Institutes, a membership organization of national public health institutes.