Leutenberg issued this piece in 1918 under the emergency coinage provisions that swept through hundreds of German municipalities as the Imperial war economy consumed copper and nickel wholesale. The Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt principality had been absorbed into the broader German federal structure, leaving small towns like Leutenberg to manage their own small-change crises with whatever metal remained locally available. Zinc was the default of last resort — corroding readily in circulation, which explains why surviving examples in presentable condition are harder to find than the modest size of this community might otherwise suggest.
Leutenberg issued this piece in 1918 under the emergency coinage provisions that swept through hundreds of German municipalities as the Imperial war economy consumed copper and nickel wholesale. The Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt principality had been absorbed into the broader German federal structure, leaving small towns like Leutenberg to manage their own small-change crises with whatever metal remained locally available. Zinc was the default of last resort — corroding readily in circulation, which explains why surviving examples in presentable condition are harder to find than the modest size of this community might otherwise suggest.