Vollständige Bilder anzeigen — kostenlose Registrierung
Mit Google fortfahren — kostenlos oder mit E-Mail registrieren

1000 Gulden

Emittent Gemeinde Stadt Wien / Banco Zettel's Haupt-Kasse
Jahr 1796
Typ Standard circulation banknote
Nennwert Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Währung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Material Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Größe Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Form Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Druckerei Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Designer Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Stecher Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Im Umlauf bis Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Referenz(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Vorderseitenbeschreibung Typeset note with letterpress printing throughout. The denomination "1000" appears in a decorative cartouche at top centre, with Gothic script reading "Das ist Tausend Gulden Wiener-Stadt Banco-Zettel" in the central panel. Ornamental borders frame the note, with manuscript signatures and a serial number in ink at the base.
Vorderseitenlegende Das ist
Tausend
Gulden
Wiener-Stadt
Banco-Zettel
von Einer Stadt Wien
Tausend Gulden
Banco Zettel's Haupt-Kasse
1000
Rückseitenbeschreibung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Rückseitenlegende Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Unterschrift(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Sicherheitsmerkmal Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Beschreibung der Sicherheitsmerkmale Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Varianten Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Anmerkungen

The Banco Zettel — formally the Wiener Stadtbank — issued these large-denomination notes under municipal rather than imperial authority, a jurisdictional arrangement that had grown increasingly strained by the 1790s. By 1796, Austria was financing its campaigns against revolutionary France through aggressive paper issuance, and the Stadtbank's notes were being absorbed into a monetary system already showing serious inflationary pressure. The imperial Banco-Zettel series and the municipal notes circulated side by side, to considerable public confusion.

At 1000 Gulden, this was not a note that passed through ordinary hands. High-denomination issues of this period served primarily wholesale merchant transactions and state financial transfers. The 1811 Bankalzettel devaluation — which reduced outstanding paper to one-fifth face value — would have wiped most surviving examples of this series from economic relevance entirely.