The main motif is an effigy of Nezahualcóyotl, accompanied by an allegory to the verses "I love the song of zentzontle/bird of four hundred voices" which appear on the banknote. The allegory comprises the drawings of a zentzontle, four symbols of the word, a piece of jade, a flower and two seated men.
The main element is a Nezahualcóyotl-styled glyph vignette next to the drawing of an aqueduct from the High Temple of the México-Tenochtitlán main plaza.
Mexico image - Tenochtitlán inspired by the work of Ignacio Marquina-Barredo, architect and archaeologist.
Thanks to José Alejandro Villalobos-Pérez.
Guillermo Saldaña / Gerardo Salinas-INAH.
Reproduction authorized by Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH, for its acronym in Spanish).