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1 Peseta Cazorla

发行方 Asociación de Dependientes de Comercio de Cazorla
年份
类型 Emergency banknote
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正面描述 Typeset letterpress note printed in black on plain paper stock, with the issuer's name and town set across the upper portion in two lines separated by a thin rule. The promise-to-pay legend occupies the centre between horizontal rules, with the denomination value split between a large bold 'UNA' at lower left and 'PESETA' in spaced capitals at centre-right, followed by a decorative row of small diamond ornaments. A handwritten serial number appears at the lower centre, prefixed by the printed abbreviation 'No.'
正面铭文 La Asociación de Dependientes de Comercio CAZORLA PAGARÁ AL PORTADOR UNA PESETA
(Translation: The Association of Shop Clerks Cazorla Will pay the bearer One Peseta)
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Cazorla is a small town in the Sierra de Cazorla, Jaén province, and like hundreds of Spanish municipalities it issued its own emergency small change during the Civil War years after metallic coins effectively vanished from circulation. Notes issued by local merchant or worker associations — rather than the ayuntamiento itself — are among the least systematically catalogued of the entire Spanish emergency emission phenomenon. The Asociación de Dependientes de Comercio was a shopworkers' union-type body, and its authority to issue circulating paper was entirely local and informal.

The Gari Morera reference being incomplete signals how thinly documented this specific emission remains.