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| Issuer | Land Niederösterreich (Province of Lower Austria) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1920 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 10 Hellers (0.10) |
| Currency | Log in to see details |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| In circulation to | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | 10 Heller Land Niederösterreich 10 Heller |
| Reverse description | Text-based note with a decorative border of interlocking geometric and foliate motifs. The numeral '10' appears at upper left and upper right flanking the central heading 'Kassenschein des Landes Niederösterreich über zehn Heller' in Gothic script, followed by several paragraphs of legal text in German authorizing the issue, stating validity and redemption terms, and affirming the province's liability. Three manuscript signatures appear at the foot above their respective titles, dated 'Wien, im Mai 1920', with the printer's imprint 'Christoph Reisser's Söhne, Wien' at the very bottom. |
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| Comments |
Austrian provincial notgeld from the hyperinflationary breakdown of 1919–1922, when the central government could no longer guarantee coin supply and individual Länder, municipalities, and even businesses began issuing their own emergency fractional currency. Lower Austria — which at the time still administratively enclosed Vienna before the 1921 separation — was among the larger provincial issuers, and its notes were printed by Christoph Reisser's Söhne, a long-established Viennese commercial press rather than a specialist security printer.
Reisser's lack of intaglio capability is visible in surviving examples: the printing is flat lithography, with none of the tactile depth associated with contemporary banknote production. Counterfeiting such low-denomination notgeld was rarely worth the effort, which is presumably why the issuer didn't demand more.