LONDON: The Bank of England on Thursday unveiled a new design for Britain's top-value banknote featuring gay World War II code-breaker Alan Turing, celebrating diversity even as cash falls out of favour.
The more durable and forgery-secure £50 polymer note (worth about $70 or 60 euros) will enter circulation on June 23, Turing's birthday, the UK's central bank said.
Turing was a mathematician and is considered the father of modern computing. He spearheaded a team at Britain's Bletchley Park that cracked the Nazis' Enigma code in 1941.
"He was also gay, and was treated appallingly as a result," Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said in a statement.
"By placing him on our new polymer £50 banknote, we are celebrating his achievements, and the values he symbolises."
The Cambridge University educated mathematician also developed the "Turing test", which looks at what criteria are needed to judge whether a machine can think like a human -- the foundation for artificial intelligence.
But he was prosecuted in 1952 for "gross indecency" and was forced to undergo chemical castration as an alternative to jail.





















Comments
Comments are closed for this article.