Tuesday, August 5, 2025

The nun Sister Juana was featured on banknotes for 41 years

The 17th-century poet and writer Sister Juana Inés de la Cruz has been featured on Mexican banknotes for 41 years. Today it was time to say farewell.

Sister Juana first appeared on the brown 1,000-peso banknote in 1978. The other side of the bill showed a landscape of the Santo Domingo Plaza in Mexico City.

After Mexico’s currency was reorganized in 1993, Sister Juana moved to the 200-peso note, where she has remained until today.

The note shows the baroque poet’s face with a fragment of her famous poem You Foolish Men. The opposite side shows a landscape of the Panoayan Hacienda in Amecameca, México state, where Sister Juana lived as a child.

On Monday, Mexico’s central bank (Banxico) began circulating the new 200-peso notes which will gradually replace the Sister Juana bills.

El Pinacate biosphere reserve in Sonora is featured on the reverse side of the new banknote.
El Pinacate biosphere reserve in Sonora is featured on the reverse side of the new banknote.

The new notes show the faces of independence heroes Miguel Hidalgo and José María Morelos on one side and the Pinacate biosphere reserve in Sonora on the other.

But Sister Juana’s face may linger for several years.

According to Banxico, there were 887 million 200-peso notes in circulation in July, and the notes circulate for an average of 52 months.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
ABC Daycare protest

Mexico asks US to extradite former daycare owner convicted of manslaughter

1
The co-owner of ABC Daycare Center, where a fire in 2009 claimed the lives of 49 young children and babies, was a fugitive in the United States until her recent arrest in Arizona.
Drug bust on boat in French Polynesia

Sailboat carrying US $381M in drugs from Mexico intercepted in French Polynesia

0
French Polynesia’s vast maritime zone comprises 5.5 million square kilometers, making it a popular route for traffickers to ship their drugs from South American and Mexican sources to the Australian market.
sending remittances via Western Union

Remittances to Mexico plummet 16.2% in June, the biggest drop in over a decade

6
The double-digit drop was the most of any June on record, bringing the annual decline in remittances in the first half of 2025 to nearly US $2B.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity