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| Issuer | Reichskreditkassen (Reich Credit Offices) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1939-1944 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | Log in to see details |
| Currency | Reichskreditkassenschein Mark (1940-1945) |
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| Obverse description | Greenish-black Fraktur lettering on a brown and multicolour guilloche underprint. The denomination 'Eine Reichsmark' occupies the upper central field, flanked left and right by large numeral '1' vignettes, with the Reichsadler (imperial eagle) seal of the Hauptverwaltung der Reichskreditkassen at lower left. The surrounding border is composed of dense lace-pattern guilloche work in brown and olive tones, with the serial number printed in red at the upper right. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | EINE REICHSMARK Ausgegeben auf Grund der Verordnung über Reichskreditkassen Hauptverwaltung der Reichskreditkassen |
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| Comments |
The Reichskreditkassen were established specifically as occupation currency machinery — these notes were not intended for domestic German circulation but were issued in territories under Wehrmacht control to pay troops and extract local goods without drawing on Reichsbank reserves. The system was deliberately designed so the occupied population absorbed the inflationary cost.
P#R136 circulated across a remarkable geographic range: France, Belgium, Norway, Greece, North Africa, and the Eastern Front at various points. That breadth, combined with wartime attrition, means survivors show considerable wear variance depending on where they were used.