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1 000 000 Mark

Issuer Crimmitschau, City of
Year 1923
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Reference(s) DeNG 12#931d
Obverse description Firm white paper with a steel-blue interior frame and an outer border printed in golden brown; the central letterpress text block is rendered in steel-blue with all inscriptions in black. The note bears the issuing authority text and validity clause within the framed area, with no pictorial vignette.
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Protection description G-S-Muster (Keller#206)
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Comments

Crimmitschau was a textile-industry town in Saxony that had made headlines two decades earlier during the 1903–04 weavers' strike — one of the longest industrial labor disputes in German history. By 1923, the same working population was dealing with a different catastrophe entirely. Municipalities across Germany were authorized to issue their own emergency currency, Notgeld, as the Reichsbank's output simply could not keep pace with hyperinflation's daily demands. A million marks sounds staggering; by mid-1923 it was bus fare.

The watermark security feature on municipal Notgeld of this period was not universal — many towns used plain stock — making its presence here a minor point of distinction within the series.

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