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10 Pfennig

Issuer Stadtverwaltung Kindelbrück
Year 1920
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Currency Mark (1914-1924)
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Obverse description Printed in green and black, the note carries the town name 'Kindelbrück' on a banner at top, flanked by decorative foliage and the municipal heraldic lion in shield cartouches on either side. A central vignette in letterpress style shows three children playing with sticks, rendered in a folk-art manner. The lower portion bears the denomination '10 Zehn Pfennig' in Gothic script on a black ground, with the issuing authority inscription 'Stadt-Kindelbrück den 23. Nov. 1920' and 'Die Stadt-Verwaltung' with a manuscript signature to the right.
Obverse lettering Kindelbrück
Immer vorwärts
Nie zurück
GUTSCHEIN über
Zehn Pfennig
10
Stadt-Kindelbrück den 23. Nov. 1920
Die Stadt-Verwaltung:
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Comments

Kindelbrück is a small town in Thuringia, and its 1920 notgeld issue belongs to the vast wave of municipal emergency money printed across Germany as coin shortages made small-denomination transactions nearly impossible. The Reichsbank's inability to keep fractional coinage in circulation — partly due to hoarding, partly due to raw material constraints — forced thousands of local administrations to issue their own scrip, most of it printed on whatever paper stock was locally available.

The presence of a watermark on a 10 Pfennig municipal note is worth flagging. Most small-town notgeld at this level was printed on plain unprotected stock; a watermarked substrate suggests either a deliberate anti-counterfeiting measure or, more likely, that the printer happened to source security paper for the run.

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