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| 正面描述 | Green and black Notgeld note with a wave-pattern guilloche underprint forming the background field. At centre, the municipal arms of Münchenbernsdorf — a robed monk figure on a plain shield set within an ornate foliate cartouche — flanked on either side by the large numeral '10' above the denomination 'Pfennig' in Gothic script. The town name 'Münchenbernsdorf' and voucher legend 'Gutschein über' appear across the top in bold Fraktur lettering; at lower left the anti-counterfeiting warning 'Nachahmung strafbar' is printed, while at lower right a manuscript signature appears above the title 'Bürgermeister'. A validity notice in italic script runs along the lower margin, and the printer's imprint 'H. Matthes, Münchenbernsdorf' is typeset beneath the green border. |
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| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in green and black on a dark ground. A large vignette occupies the full inner field, rendered in a bold woodcut style, showing an arrangement of rolled carpets, folded blankets, and runners of various patterns displayed in a still-life composition. Above the vignette, a three-line inscription in white Gothic script on the dark background proclaims the town's textile trade renown. A bright green ruled border frames the entire reverse. |
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Münchenbernsdorf is a small town in the Greiz district of Thuringia, and this 1920 Kleingeldschein is a product of the acute small-change shortage that gripped Germany after the First World War — silver had been hoarded or melted, and official coinage couldn't keep pace with demand. Thousands of German municipalities issued their own Notgeld during this period, typically printed by local jobbers. H. Matthes was a local printer, not a specialist banknote firm, which shows in the modest production values typical of small-town emergency currency from this phase.