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1 Peseta Casasbuenas

Issuer Consejo Municipal de Casasbuenas (Toledo)
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Composition Paper
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Obverse description Plain cream paper stock with letterpress printing in red ink throughout. The issuer name is set in two lines across the upper half, separated from the denomination by a horizontal rule underline. The denomination "UNA peseta" is printed in large red letterpress type across the lower half of the note.
Obverse lettering Consejo Municipal de Casasbuenas (Toledo) UNA peseta
(Translation: Municipal Council of Casasbuenas (Toledo) One Peseta)
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Casasbuenas is a village in the Toledo province with a population that likely never exceeded a few hundred people — which makes the existence of a formally issued municipal emergency note both historically striking and logistically improbable. During the Spanish Civil War, the Republican zone suffered an acute shortage of small-denomination coinage, prompting hundreds of municipal councils, many of them tiny, to issue their own paper or cardboard scrip under a 1936 decree that loosened controls on local emergency currency.

Survival rates for these village-level emissions are erratic. Small print runs, rough handling, and the chaos of the postwar period eliminated most.

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