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| 背面描述 | The reverse is similarly tripartite in layout, with a central urban townscape vignette flanked by two panels illustrating the local textile industry. A regional dialect verse runs across the note serving as the principal text inscription. |
| 背面铭文 | UN D`R KASSE SEI M`R NIEDER, SCHAFF` NE ALTEN SCHATZ ZER STELL |
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Mylau is a small town in the Vogtland region of Saxony, and this note is a product of the post-WWI Notgeld wave that flooded Germany between 1919 and 1922. Municipal councils across the country issued their own emergency small-denomination scrip to compensate for a chronic shortage of official coinage — itself a consequence of metal hoarding and wartime metal requisitions that had gutted circulation long before hyperinflation became the dominant story.
Carl Werner of Reichenbach was a regional printer responsible for a number of Vogtland Notgeld issues, working close to home here — Reichenbach sits just a few kilometers from Mylau itself.