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10 Pfennig

Issuer Bürgermeisterei Wiebelskirchen
Year 1920
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Shape Rectangular
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Reverse description The reverse is printed in blue-violet on a fine geometric underprint pattern. A central oval vignette, framed by a decorative scrollwork surround, presents a detailed letterpress view of a coal mine complex, with a prominent headframe tower, multi-storey pithead building, rail tracks in the foreground, and a broad industrial landscape extending to the horizon. The serial number is printed in large serifed numerals below the vignette, with the printer's imprint in small type at the lower right.
Reverse lettering No 099750
GEBR. PARCUS MÜNCHEN
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Comments

Wiebelskirchen was a small industrial township in the Saar coalfield, and its municipal authority — the Bürgermeisterei — issued this note as Kleingeldersatz during the acute small-change shortage that gripped Germany in 1919–1920. The Reichsbank simply could not produce low-denomination coin fast enough to meet demand after the wartime metal hoarding and postwar disruption. Thousands of German municipalities issued their own Notgeld as a result, most of them ephemeral and poorly printed.

Gebrüder Parcus was a Munich lithographic firm that handled a significant volume of Notgeld commissions during this period, bringing more consistent production quality than many local print shops could manage.

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