2. 50 Intis. 1987. UNC.
3. 100 Intis. 1987. AU.
4. 500 Intis. 1987. XF.
5. 1,000 Soles de Oro. 1981. VF.
The sol was introduced in 1863 when Peru completed its decimalization, replacing the real at a rate of 1 sol = 10 reales. The sol also replaced the Bolivian peso, which had circulated in southern Peru, at the rate of 1 sol = 1.25 Bolivian pesos. Between 1858 and 1863, coins had been issued denominated in reales, centavos and escudos. The sol was initially pegged to the French franc at a rate of 1 sol = 5 francs (5.25 soles to the British pound and 1.08 soles to the US dollar).
In 1880 and 1881, silver coins denominated in pesetas, were issued, worth 20 centavos to the peseta. In 1881, the inca, worth ten soles, was introduced for use on banknotes. The peg to the franc was replaced in 1901 by a link to sterling at a rate of 10 soles = 1 pound, with gold coins and banknotes issued denominated in libra. This peg was maintained until 1930 when Peru left the gold standard and established an official rate of 2.5 soles = 1 USD, a rate which remained until 1946. In 1933, banknotes were issued once more denominated in soles, now called soles de oro. This name also appeared from 1935 on coins, when silver was replaced by base metal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peruvian_sol
5,000 Soles de Oro. 1985. G.
6. 1,000 Intis. 1988. AU.
7. 5,000 Intis. 1988. VF.
8. 10,000 Intis. 1988. VF.
9. 50,000 Intis. 1988. VF.
10. 100,000 Intis. 1988. VF.
11. 5 Million Intis. 1991.