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1 Mark

Issuer Stadt Holzminden (City of Holzminden)
Year 1921
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Currency Mark (1914-1924)
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Reverse description Coloured vignette in a folk-art style set within an octagonal decorative frame of beaded and scrollwork borders. The central scene illustrates the 'Ausmarsch' (parade departure) of the Holzmindener Schützenfest, with a uniformed officer mounted on a white horse at centre, accompanied by riflemen and townspeople in period dress. Denomination panels reading '1M' appear at lower left and lower right.
Reverse lettering HOLZMINDENER SCHÜTZENFEST AUSMARSCH (BILD 2) 1M 1M
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Comments

Holzminden's 1921 notgeld issue was produced by Gebrüder Jänecke, a Hannover firm better known for its ink manufacturing than its printing — though by the early Weimar period the company had developed a competent securities and commercial print operation. The 1 Mark denomination places this squarely in the inflationary transitional phase before hyperinflation rendered mark-denominated municipal paper effectively worthless within two years of issue.

Holzminden, a small Lower Saxon town on the Weser, issued notgeld primarily to address the chronic small-change shortage that plagued German municipalities after the war. Most of these civic issues had short redemption windows and were not intended to survive.