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| 背面描述 | The reverse is dominated by a detailed architectural vignette of the Rathaus (town hall) of Neustadt an der Orla, viewed through a tall Gothic arch rendered in teal and black, the building's stepped gable and pointed tower rising against a clouded sky in warm ochre and brown tones. Red hexagonal cartouches bearing '10 Pfg.' are placed at the upper left and upper right corners within the arch framing. A continuous Gothic-script inscription runs vertically along both lateral borders, with the caption 'Rathaus zu Neustadt a.d. Orla' set in a panel at the foot of the central vignette and the printer's imprint below. |
| 背面铭文 | Rathaus zu Neustadt a.d. Orla 10 Pfg. Druck: Johannes Arndt-Jena |
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Neustadt an der Orla is a small Thuringian town, and this note belongs to the vast wave of municipal Kleingeldscheine issued across Germany in 1921 when coin shortages — driven by hoarding and metal speculation during the postwar economic dislocation — left ordinary commerce nearly paralyzed. Hundreds of towns printed their own fractional notes, and quality varied enormously. Johannes Arndt in Jena was a competent regional printer who handled a number of Thuringian emergency issues during this period.
The DeNG reference places this firmly within the documented Notgeld corpus, though 10 Pfennig denominations at this stage were already becoming economically marginal as inflation accelerated through 1921.