Hechingen was the capital of the tiny principality of Hohenzollern-Hechingen until its absorption into Prussia in 1850, and by 1918 it was a modest Württemberg district town with no particular monetary clout — which makes its wartime notgeld issue entirely unremarkable in origin but historically legible. Iron was the only practical option by late 1918; copper and nickel had long since been requisitioned for the war effort, and municipal authorities across Germany were improvising small-change solutions as the imperial economy collapsed beneath them.
Hechingen was the capital of the tiny principality of Hohenzollern-Hechingen until its absorption into Prussia in 1850, and by 1918 it was a modest Württemberg district town with no particular monetary clout — which makes its wartime notgeld issue entirely unremarkable in origin but historically legible. Iron was the only practical option by late 1918; copper and nickel had long since been requisitioned for the war effort, and municipal authorities across Germany were improvising small-change solutions as the imperial economy collapsed beneath them.