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10 Heller Mödling

Issuer Gemeinde Biedermannsdorf bez. Mödling
Year 1920
Type Local banknote
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Obverse lettering GEMEINDE BIEDERMANNSDORF BEZ. MÖDLING
GUTSCHEIN ÜBER ZEHN HELLER
NACHAHMUNG WIRD BESTRAFT
10 HELLER
LAUT SITZUNGSBESCHLUSS VOM 22. JUNI 1920 WIRD DIESER GUTSCHEIN
BIS 15. JULI 1920 IN GESETZLICHEM BARGELD EINGELÖST.
VIZEBÜRGERMEISTER:
BÜRGERMEISTER:
KÄMMERER:
DRUCK V. J. WEHMOSER, MÖDLING
Reverse description The reverse is entirely unprinted, presenting a plain cream paper surface devoid of any design, text, or security elements, consistent with the austere production methods characteristic of Austrian Notgeld emergency currency of this period.
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Comments

Biedermannsdorf is a small municipality immediately south of Vienna, and this 10 Heller note is a product of the Austrian Notgeld wave that followed the collapse of the Habsburg economy — local governments issuing their own emergency scrip because small change had effectively vanished from circulation. J. Wehmoser was a local Mödling printer, not a security printing house, which is exactly what you'd expect from a commune of this size working within the constraints of 1920.

Three signatories authenticate the note: the Bürgermeister, Vizebürgermeister, and Kämmerer — the municipal treasurer. That triple-signature requirement was Biedermannsdorf's own procedural choice, not an Austrian standard.

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