The ``One hundred hryvnias'' souvenir banknote reproduces the design of the Ukrainian banknote with a face value of 100 hryvnias, put into circulation on October 17, 1918. In the spring of 1918, the Ukrainian government decided to change the name of the national money from ``karbovants'' to ``hryvnias'', wanting to emphasize the inheritance of state-building traditions from the time of Kyivan Rus. The most valuable from an artistic point of view was the 100-hryvnia banknote designed and executed by H. Narbut, which depicts a lush wreath of flowers, fruits, vegetables, and wheat. On either side are a woman in national dress with a sheaf of wheat and a sickle in her hand and a man in an apron leaning on a hammer wrapped in laurel. The inscriptions on the reverse side are included in a large cartouche made of vegetable and fruit ornament, and on the sides - decorative columns. Crowning the entire composition is a trident framed by a laurel wreath. The banknote is made on paper with a watermark (image of a trident). Its dimensions: 80 x 170 mm.