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| Issuer | Gemeinde Kössen (Municipality of Kössen) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1919 |
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| In circulation to | 31 December 1920 |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | 10 Hl Kössen. 1919. Zehn Heller Kassenschein der Gemeinde Kössen i. Tirol Giltig bis 31. Dez. 1920. Bürgermeister: Vizebürgerm: Gem. Rat: 2. Auflage WAGNER, INNSBRUCK |
| Reverse description | The reverse repeats the obverse design in its entirety, printed in blue on the same salmon-pink wavy-line guilloche paper, with the edelweiss vignette in the left panel and the full Gothic-script Kassenschein text, validity date, and signature lines in the right panel, confirming this is a single-sided or mirror-printed Notgeld issue. |
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| Comments |
Kössen is a small village in the Kitzbühel district of Tyrol, and this 10 Heller note is one of thousands of Austrian municipal emergency issues — Notgeld — produced in the chaotic period following the collapse of the Habsburg Empire. The sudden disappearance of reliable small change in 1918–1919 forced communes of every size to print their own fractional currency, with Wagner in Innsbruck handling a substantial share of the Tyrolean output.
The JPR0468a prefix in the Jaksch catalog places this firmly within the documented Kössen series, which covered multiple denominations. Small-commune issues like this typically circulated briefly and locally before being redeemed and destroyed — survivors tend to come from uncirculated remainder stocks rather than actual pocket wear.