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| Issuer | Gemeinde Brixlegg (Municipality of Brixlegg) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1920 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 10 Hellers (0.10) |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | Log in to see details |
| Reverse description | Green-tinted reverse printed in the Jugendstil manner, with symmetrical Art Nouveau side panels of sinuous foliate tendrils and pairs of stylised alpine motifs in decorative squares flanking a central photographic vignette of the resort town of Brixlegg set against a mountain backdrop, showing the church spire and village rooftops in the valley. Denomination panels reading '10 Heller' are placed in the upper left and upper right corners. The place name inscription appears in a cartouche at the foot of the central image. |
| Reverse lettering | 10 Heller Kurort Brixlegg, Tirol |
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| Comments |
Brixlegg's 1920 Heller notes belong to the vast wave of Austrian municipal notgeld that flooded the country following the collapse of the Habsburg economy and the currency chaos of the early republic. With small change coins hoarded or simply absent from circulation, hundreds of Tyrolean towns and villages printed their own low-denomination emergency paper — Brixlegg among them. The 10 Heller denomination was among the most common targets for this stopgap issuance, useful for the smallest daily transactions that metal coinage could no longer reliably serve.
Austrian municipal notgeld of this period was typically printed locally in short runs, which accounts for the considerable variation in paper quality and printing precision across surviving examples from different communities.