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Curious why the board never paid back the original principal at any point in time over the past 400 years?

If the current annual interest of 2.5% cited in the article is €13.61, that would make 1200 guilders €544.40.

Did they just forget to? Did they figure the bond would eventually disappear? Or did they at some point think it was really cool to have a piece of "living history" and want to keep the world record alive for oldest active bond? If so... when?



It's such a low amount it's barely a blip on the budget of the successor issuer and by the time it was rediscovered in modern times it was enough of a historical novelty it was more interesting to keep it than to cancel it. Most of these bonds go years without being collected on.


A similar one owned by Yale can be viewed online [0]. It was issued in 1648, and it seems to have a fairly continuous payment history since then. There are gaps of a few decades, but nothing too extreme.

[0]: https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/2008714




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