Friday, October 31, 2025

Sor Juana 100-peso bill wins banknote of the year award

The Sor Juana 100-peso bill has been named banknote of the year for 2020 by the International Bank Note Society (IBNS).

As printer and issuer of the note, the Bank of México beat 24 other nominees to the award, and the Sor Juana bill led the way from the start of the voting process.

The note features national heroine Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, with the monarch butterfly biosphere reserve on its reverse.

Born in 1651, Sor Juana was a self-educated nun and intellectual renowned for her poetry, writing and political activism, who criticized the misogyny of colonial Mexico.

In its announcement the IBNS wrote: “Mexico’s award-winning entry may provide a template as other countries reconsider how they design and promote new banknotes.  The successful design in eye-pleasing red combines Hispanic architecture, a famous female Hispanic literary figure and a tribute to the world’s fragile ecosystem.”

Other popular notes included Scotland’s tea room 20-pound note, the Bahamas’ carnival five-dollar bill, Northern Ireland’s 20-pound street musicians banknote and Fiji’s 50-dollar bill celebrating 50 years of independence.

Past bank note of the year recipients include Aruba, Canada, Uganda, the Faroe Islands, two time winner Switzerland and three time winner Kazakhstan, among others.

Mexico News Daily

SAT building

US Chamber of Commerce takes aim at Mexico’s tax agency ahead of USMCA review

5
According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the SAT's "aggressive and inconsistent tax enforcement practices" have created uncertainty and increased costs for U.S. businesses.
illegal logging

Profepa cracks down on illegal logging in Michoacán butterfly reserve

2
By cutting down naturally occurring oaks and firs in favor of cash crops like avocados and limes, the culprits altered the microclimates that protect the migrating monarch butterflies.
Metepantle

Tlaxcala’s 3,000-year-old farming system honored by the United Nations

3
The Food and Agriculture Organization recently designated metepantle, a mosaic of terraces where crops are planted alongside succulents, a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System (GIAHS).
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity