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The E-Sylum: Volume 23, Number 11, March 15, 2020, Article 30

FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE BANKNOTE LAMP ERROR

It's hard to get historical scenes right, and sometime inaccurate depictions find their way onto coins and banknotes. Here's an article about a problem with Florence Nightingale's lamp found via News & Notes Volume V, Number 38, March 10, 2020 from the Society of Paper Money Collectors. -Editor

Florence Nightingale banknote

The £10 note which was in circulation for nearly 20 years featured Florence Nightingale holding the wrong lamp.

Nightingale, dubbed ‘The Lady with the Lamp' during the Crimean War, was featured on a commemorative banknote in circulation between 1975 and 1994. At their peak in 1990 there were almost 600 million of the notes in circulation.

Her standing portrait on the reverse of the £10 note is accompanied with a background scene from the Scutari hospital where she served in Turkey.

At the centre of the picture, rays of light shine from the lamp Nightingale holds while she and other nurses tend to patients.

Florence Nightingale lamp The lamp on the note is a genie-style lamp that holds a candle, but Nightingale used the more elaborate and distinctive folded Turkish ‘fanoos' lamp.

David Green, the Florence Nightingale Museum director, said: "There were journalists sent over in the Crimean War but no photographers, so when they described the woman walking around the ward, none of them described the lamp."

During the Crimean War, The Times reported on Nightingale walking around the beds of wounded men throughout the night, holding a lamp aloft before her.

Yet the precise outline of the lantern light used to care for the wounded and dying soldiers was never specified.

It is often the historically inaccurate Grecian lamp or genie lamp, as opposed to the folding Turkish lamp.

Of the erroneous 1975 banknote, Mr Green said: "It's a piece of history you can carry around in your pocket, and it also shows you how accuracy is important."

The banknote will feature in the upcoming exhibition ‘Nightingale and Popular Fiction', which will be displayed at the museum.

The exhibition objects are being taken out of the museum's storage or sourced from other institutions.

The museum is constructing a giant version of Nightingale's fanoos lamp for a tourist photo opportunity.

Nightingale was the first woman to appear on a banknote, excluding the female monarchs, and remained the only woman immortalised on paper currency until 2002.

The Bank of England commissioned new designs for the four polymer notes, which began to enter circulation in 2016.

The article surprisingly did not picture Nightingale's lamp, but I found and added an image of it from the Florence Nightingale Museum in a Smithsonian magazine article (linked below). -Editor

To read the complete article, see:
Shining a light on £10 Florence Nightingale banknote lamp blunder (https://www.swlondoner.co.uk/shine-a-light-lamp-blunder-on-10-florence-nightingale-banknote/)

To read the Smithsonian magazine article, see: Celebrate Florence Nightingale's 200th Birthday With Exhibit Featuring Her Famed Lamp, Pet Owl (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/exhibition-celebrates-florence-nightingale-through-200-objectsincluding-her-famed-lamp-180974357/)



Wayne Homren, Editor

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To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@gmail.com

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