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100 000 Mark

发行方 Karlsruhe, City of
年份 1923
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面值 100 000 Mark (100 000)
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正面描述 登录 以查看详情
正面铭文 DER STADTRAT ANNO 1923 GUTSCHEIN DER LANDESHAUPTSTADT KARLSRUHE Hunderttausend Mark 100.000 NUR MIT TROCKENSTEMPEL GÜLTIG
(Translation: THE CITY COUNCIL ANNO 1923 VOUCHER FROM THE STATE CAPITAL KARLSRUHE One Hundred Thousand Mark 100,000 ONLY VALID WITH DRY STAMP)
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防伪类型 登录 以查看详情
防伪描述 An embossed dry stamp (Trockenstempel) applied to the obverse as a validation mark; notes without this stamp were not considered valid.
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Karlsruhe was one of hundreds of German municipalities that issued their own emergency currency during the hyperinflationary spiral of 1923, when the Reichsbank simply could not print fast enough to keep pace with collapsing purchasing power. By the time a 100,000 Mark note reached the counter, its real value had often already halved. Wilhelm Schnarrenberger, a Baden regionalist painter with genuine credentials, was an unusual choice for this kind of rushed fiscal printing — his involvement suggests the city was at least making some effort at civic presentation rather than pure expediency.

The embossed dry stamp was the primary anti-counterfeiting measure, which says everything about how rudimentary Notgeld security had become by mid-1923.

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