It seems that the oldest numeration on banknotes was sequence of letters followed by sequence of numerals. Here is one of the examples 100 years old

(Source: https://t.me/s/enjoyyourcollection?q=SWEDEN+1918 )
It is from Sweden and the style of letters use in different cases: upper and lower.
There is an outstanding example of such numbering during the dissolution of the USSR. One of its territories decided to add numbers on a common printer!

(Source: https://t.me/s/enjoyyourcollection?q=uzbekistan+1993 )
Look at the number:

it consists of the dots from matrix printers! It should be very hard work, printers especially dot matrix ones worked very unstable those days. And again the case (upper or lower) of letters was essential for the series.
But the numeration of one more style, a fraction in front of the number, was introduced in XX century. As far as I know, here is one of oldest example of it


Known to me style there is the use of capital letter at the top (nominator of the fraction) and number at the bottom.

Of course some languages do not have capital letters, so just a letter was used, and a territory of the USSR used number over number instead of letter over number during its dissolution. The reason for using number over number can be due to difficulty those days of putting fonts into numerator to print for example Ⴀ , so such emission was just a monument to limits of human progress.
This fraction type creates questions: why it was introduced, was it or is it more practical than the regular style, why there was switch during emission from fraction to regular style in some territories.





