The Scotsman

Astronomer Mary Somerville features on new RBS £10 note

- By CONOR RIORDAN

The Royal Bank of Scotland has announced the date it will issue its first plastic £10 note.

It will be released to the public on Thursday 4 October, and will be 15 per cent smaller than those currently in circulatio­n.

The note will feature Scottish mathematic­ian and astronosom­erville mer Mary as part of the bank’s Fabric of Nature theme.

RBS chief executive Ross Mcewan, said: “At the Royal Bank of Scotland, we feel that a banknote’s value is more than just the figure printits ed across front – it is our symbol which lives in people’s pockets and touches everyday lives.

“It has been 30 years since we produced a new £10 note and as the Royal Bank of Scotland, we wanted the public to help influence the design.

“They helped influence our theme of Fabric of Nature and helped us consider the impact Mary Somerville has had on our understand­ing of the world in which we live.

“It is fitting that our most advanced note yet will carry her portrait.” Behind Mary’s portrait is an illustrati­on of her hometown, Burntislan­d in Fife.

A moon diagram taken from her book, Mechanism Of The Heavens, appears when the note is viewed under UV light.

The material contains a variety of new security features, which the bank claims makes it “difficult to counterfei­t

but easy to authentica­te”.

On the other side of the note there are a pair of otters, most commonly seen in the UK in the west of Scotland.

Words from Scottish poet Norman Maccaig also feature.

For the first time, the bank will include braille on the note to help the visually impaired.

The face of the polymer £20 has also been revealed as philanthro­pist and entreprene­ur Catherine Cranston.

Cranston, from Glasgow, made her name for her series of tearooms across the city. Her flagship venue, The Willow Tearooms, became part of Scotland’s design heritage due to an interior created by Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

The £20 note is expected to enter circulatio­n in 2020. Malcolm

Buchanan, chairman of the Scottish board with the Royal Bank of Scotland, said: “As a bank we celebrate entreprene­urialism and creating opportunit­y, and Catherine Cranston embodies that spirit.

“Catherine will follow Nan Shepherd and Mary Somerville in gracing notes fit for a modern age and one that will serve customers across Scotland for years to come.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom