Collection › Uzbekistan › #604
100 UZS
P-P-79
Needs review
✦ AI 90%
The AI flagged these for your attention. Use ✦ Fact-check to cross-check factual fields against another model's world-knowledge, or 🔍 Re-look at image when you suspect the AI misread the pixels.
-
Some fields the AI was unsure about — please verify:
- Printer: “—” (0%)
- Watermark: “—” (0%)
- Front portrait: “—” (0%)
Click ✦ Ask AI to verify or fix any below. -
Overall AI confidence is 90% (auto-approve threshold is 92%).Skim the Identity tab; the dots next to each field show what the AI was unsure about.
Where & when
What's on the note
Front: Amir Timur Museum in Tashkent, a neoclassical building completed in 2006 but depicted here is likely an earlier government building or palace from the Soviet or early independence era. The structure features three arched entrances with ornate detailing, surrounded by landscaped gardens with trees and a fountain. The Uzbek text at bottom reads 'ЎЗБЕКИСТОН СУМИНИ ҚАЛБАКИЛАШТИРИШ / ҚОНУНАН ТАЪҚИБ ҚИЛИНАДИ' (Counterfeiting the Uzbekistan sum is punishable by law). This note belongs to the first series of Uzbekistani sum issued after independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
Back: State Emblem of Uzbekistan at center, featuring the Huma bird with outstretched wings, a rising sun over mountains, cotton and wheat sheaves representing the nation's agriculture, and a blue-white-green ribbon. The emblem is surrounded by ornamental borders in traditional Uzbek style. The serial number EA2531816 appears twice on the back, with the year 1994 printed at lower right. Text reads 'ЎЗБЕКИСТОН РЕСПУБЛИКАСИ МАРКАЗИЙ БАНКИ' (Central Bank of the Republic of Uzbekistan) and '100 ЮЗ СЎМ' (100 sum). The lower inscription states legal tender status.
How it was made
Security features: microprint,intaglio
Uzbekistan in Asia
Uzbekistan in Asia. Other countries on the same continent shown in muted grey.
Background & history
This 100 sum note is from Uzbekistan's first national currency series, issued in 1994 following independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The sum-coupon was introduced in 1993 as a transitional currency, replaced by the sum in 1994. This series circulated during a period of severe hyperinflation in the mid-1990s and was withdrawn when the currency was redenominated in 1997 at a rate of 1 new sum = 1,000 old sum. The front depicts a neoclassical building with gardens, while the reverse prominently features the newly adopted State Emblem of independent Uzbekistan. The printed year 1994 on the reverse confirms the issue date. Pick catalog reference P-79.
Collector references
How it came to me
Appears uncirculated with crisp edges and no visible folds or wear
What it's worth now
Valuation history (1)
| date | low | high | currency | source | note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-10 07:34:14 | 1.0 | 3.0 | USD | ai | from claude-sonnet-4-5 |
History & extractions
AI extractions (1)
Edits & decisions (0)
No edits yet.
Manual fixups
Find near-duplicates
Manual pairing override
Edit specimen #604
All fields below post to the same save endpoint. Sections collapse to focus on what you need.
Re-crop manually
Drag the four corners to mark the banknote in each image. Click Save crop to apply.