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10 Pfennig - Pappenheim

Issuer Pappenheim, City of
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Currency Mark (1914-1924)
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Obverse description Central field bears the quartered municipal coat of arms of Pappenheim, featuring a lion rampant on a diaper-patterned field, surmounted by a civic mural crown. The shield is flanked by decorative supporters. The circumferential legend reads KGL. BAYER. STADT PAPPENHEIM, separated by star ornaments, and the entire design is bordered by a raised dentilated rim.
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Reverse script Latin
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Additional information

Pappenheim's zinc notgeld issues emerged from the same wartime metal shortage that stripped German municipal coffers of copper and nickel from 1916 onward. The city — a small Franconian market town best known as the ancestral seat of the Pappenheim counts and their famous cavalry commander Gottfried Heinrich — issued these emergency pieces to keep small transactions moving when Reichsmünzen had vanished from circulation into hoarding and industrial use.

Zinc was a compromise material: cheap, workable, but corrosion-prone. Survivors in clean condition are genuinely scarce.

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