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10 Heller Innsbruck

Issuer Notgeld-Sammlerbund Innsbruck
Year 1920
Type Local banknote
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Obverse description The obverse is printed in brown, salmon, and green tones on a buff ground, framed by a ruled border. To the left, an oval vignette within a decorative wreath presents a romanticised view of the Castel Firmiano (Salurn) perched on rocky crags, captioned SALURN below; the monogram H appears at lower left. To the right, the denomination 10 Hl. is set in large Gothic script at upper right, beneath which a four-line redemption text in German script advises that the Notgeld-Sammlerbund is liable for redemption between 15 and 31 December 1920, dated Innsbruck, am 1. Juni 20, followed by three manuscript signatures with the roles SÄCKELWART, OBM. STELLV., and OBMANN.
Obverse lettering 10 Hl.
Der Notgeld-Sammlerbund haftet für die Einlösung dieses Scheines in der Zeit vom 15. bis 31. Dez. 1920.
Innsbruck, am 1. Juni 20.
SÄCKELWART: OBM. STELLV.: OBMANN.
SALURN
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Comments

Austrian Notgeld of the early 1920s occupies a peculiar category: much of it was printed explicitly for collectors, not to relieve a genuine currency shortage. The Notgeld-Sammlerbund Innsbruck — a collectors' association, not a municipal authority — issued this note as a deliberate philatelic object. Wagner was a well-established Innsbruck printing house active through this period, so the production quality tends to be consistent across the series.

That the issuer was itself a numismatic organization makes the "emergency currency" framing largely fictional from the outset.

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