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1 Forint Rozsnyó

Issuer Rozsnyó város pénztára (City Treasury of Rozsnyó)
Year 1849
Type Local banknote
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Obverse description Typeset note printed in black on plain cream paper, enclosed within a decorative letterpress border of interlocking scroll and chain ornaments. At the upper centre, the numeral 'I' is flanked by two symmetrical acanthus-scroll vignettes. The body of the note carries the text of the treasury warrant in Hungarian, with the denomination line 'egy pengő forintra' set in a larger typeface for emphasis. Two handwritten signatures appear in the lower central field, dated Rozsnyó, 29 August 1849.
Obverse lettering Rozsnyó város pénztári utalványa
egy pengő forintra,
melly a város által teljes értékű s folyó pénzzel biztosittatik.
Kelt 1849 Rozsnyón Augustus 29.
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Comments

Rozsnyó was a small mining town in northern Hungary, and like dozens of Hungarian municipalities in 1849, its city treasury issued emergency fractional notes to cover the acute shortage of small-denomination currency during the Hungarian Revolution against Habsburg rule. These local pénztárjegy — treasury notes — were printed under improvised conditions, often by local presses with no specialized banknote experience, and their crude typography and thin paper stock reflect exactly that. The Ambrus catalog documents well over a hundred distinct municipal issuers from this period, most producing only a single denomination.

Survival rates for Rozsnyó issues are low. After the revolution was crushed in August 1849, Austrian authorities moved to suppress all revolutionary-era paper, and many municipal notes were surrendered or destroyed during reoccupation.

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