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| Issuer | Bezirksverband der Königlichen Amtshauptmannschaft Stollberg |
|---|---|
| Year | 1918-1920 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | Log in to see details |
| Currency | Mark (1914-1924) |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | Log in to see details |
| Reverse description | The reverse is printed in dark blue ink within a dotted-rule border matching the obverse, with the bold numeral '10' set at each of the four corners and 'Pfennige' centred at top and bottom. A letterpress text block headed 'Diesen Gutschein lösen ein:' names the three authorised redemption offices, comprising the Kassenverwaltung of the Kgl. Amtshauptmannschaft Stollberg, the Stadtkasse in Zwönitz, and the Kassenstellen of the district municipal councils. A serial number in serif typeface is printed above the central text block. |
| Reverse lettering | 10 Pfennige 10 Diesen Gutschein lösen ein: 1. Die Kassenverwaltung der Kgl. Amtshauptmannschaft Stollberg, 2. die Stadtkasse in Zwönitz, 3. sämtliche Kassenstellen der Gemeindevorstände im Bezirke. 10 Pfennige 10 |
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| Comments |
Stollberg's Amtshauptmannschaft — a regional administrative district in Saxony — issued this Kleingeldersatz note during the acute coin shortage that followed Germany's wartime metal requisitions. Municipal and district-level emergency money of this type proliferated after 1916 when brass, nickel, and copper were diverted to military production, leaving everyday transactions impossible without improvised substitutes.
District-level issuers like Stollberg occupy an odd middle tier in German Notgeld taxonomy — above the purely local Gemeinde issues but lacking the design ambition that larger cities poured into their 1921–1922 Serienscheine. These are purely functional pieces.