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1 Peseta Mora de Rubielos

Issuer Consejo Municipal de Mora de Rubielos
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Size 80 × 53 mm
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Obverse description Printed in black on coarse buff card stock, the note is laid out in a plain typographic style without vignettes or ornamental underprint. The issuer name 'Consejo Municipal de Mora de Rubielos' appears in bold lettering across the upper portion, separated by a double rule, with a handwritten series and serial number above. The face value 'UNA peseta' is set in large display type at centre-left, with a short horizontal rule beneath, and a three-line redemption clause in smaller type at lower right.
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Mora de Rubielos is a small walled town in Teruel province, Aragon. This note is a product of the acute small-change shortage that paralyzed Republican-controlled Spain almost immediately after the July 1936 military uprising — copper and silver coinage vanished from circulation within weeks as hoarding took hold, forcing hundreds of municipalities, trade unions, and local cooperatives to print their own emergency fractional currency. The Consejo Municipal issues from inland Aragonese towns are among the most locally idiosyncratic of the entire Civil War period.

The Gari Mon reference places this within a documented but thinly catalogued series. Survival rates for these card-stock municipals from rural Teruel are low — the province saw some of the war's most destructive front-line fighting in 1937–38.

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