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| 正面描述 | Yellow-green note with an elaborate dark green guilloche border enclosing a yellow crackle-pattern underprint. At the top, the issuer's name is set in bold Gothic script. A central horizontal band in pale blue carries the denomination in large white Gothic lettering, flanked on each side by a circular guilloche medallion bearing the numeral '10' with ornamental scrollwork below. Above the central band, the municipal coat of arms with a stork vignette is positioned between the words 'Gutschein' and 'über'. The lower portion carries the date, serial number, two manuscript signatures, and a disclaimer notice regarding the validity period, with the printer's imprint 'Gebr. Parcus München' at bottom right. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | Yellow-green note with a dark green ornamental border. The central vignette presents a colour view of the Sormitz riverbank in Wurzbach, with a stone arch bridge in the foreground, a tall tower building and surrounding townhouses rendered in fine multicolour lithography; a caption beneath the scene reads 'Partie an der Sormitz, Wurzbach.' Two poetic couplets in Gothic script occupy rectangular cartouches in the upper left and upper right corners. The denomination '10 Pfennig' appears in bold black numerals within decorative panels on both lateral margins, and the lower margin carries a full-width inscription 'Gutschein über Zehn Pfennig' in large Gothic lettering. |
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Wurzbach is a small town in the Thuringian Slate Mountains, and this 10 Pfennig piece belongs to the enormous wave of municipal Notgeld that swept Germany in 1921 as chronic small-change shortages persisted well beyond the armistice. Gebrüder Parcus of Munich was one of the more prolific southern German printers serving this demand, producing Notgeld for dozens of municipalities simultaneously during the period.
Wurzbach's series is modest in scope compared to the elaborate collectible-oriented issues some towns commissioned purely to generate revenue from philatelic buyers — a practice already well established by 1921 and quietly criticized within the Notgeld trade itself.