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| 正面描述 | Printed on plain paper with a vertical panel at left bearing the serial number. The central text, set in ornate German blackletter script, reads "Gutschein" above "Zehn Pfennig", separated by a small foliate decorative vignette. The issuing authority clause appears at upper right in smaller roman type, and a manuscript signature of the Gemeindevorsteher (municipal head) Andersen is applied at lower right. |
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| 背面描述 | Printed in violet-brown on a stippled ground, the reverse carries a large central circular vignette enclosed by Art Nouveau foliate scrollwork, within which a church steeple rises against a stylised clouded sky. The place name "BROACKER" is lettered at top centre, the denomination numeral "10" appears in each corner, and the year "1918" is printed at the base of the central vignette. |
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Broacker — today the Danish parish of Broager, on the peninsula south of Flensburg — was still German territory in 1918, transferred to Denmark only after the 1920 Schleswig plebiscite. This note belongs to the vast wave of municipal Kleingeldscheine issued across Germany during the First World War, when coin metal was commandeered for war production and small change all but vanished from circulation. Thousands of towns and parishes printed their own emergency fractions; Broacker's offering is among the smaller-run rural issues.
The 60 × 35 mm format is notably narrow even within this series — a practical consequence of paper rationing.