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| Uitgever | Stadt Glatz (City of Glatz), Grafschaft Glatz |
|---|---|
| Jaar | 1921 |
| Type | Log in om details te zien |
| Waarde | Log in om details te zien |
| Valuta | Log in om details te zien |
| Samenstelling | Log in om details te zien |
| Afmetingen | Log in om details te zien |
| Vorm | Rectangular |
| Drukker | Log in om details te zien |
| Ontwerper(s) | Log in om details te zien |
| Graveur(s) | Log in om details te zien |
| In omloop tot | Log in om details te zien |
| Referentie(s) | Log in om details te zien |
| Beschrijving voorzijde | Log in om details te zien |
|---|---|
| Opschrift voorzijde | Gutschein / der / Stadt Glatz / Grafschaft Glatz / Gültig bis zum 31. Dezember 1921 / Der Magistrat / 100 Pf. |
| Beschrijving keerzijde | The central panel bears the heading 'Glatzer Volksliedlein' in Gothic script above a humorous illustration of a rider mounted on a giant snail attended by two figures, rendered in a folk-art style in black and rose-red. Below the vignette, four lines of a local dialect folk song verse are printed in blackletter script interspersed with musical staff notation in red. The side borders repeat standing caricature figures of posthorn-blowing musicians flanking large '100 Pf.' denomination panels, with decorative corner rosettes throughout. |
| Opschrift keerzijde | Log in om details te zien |
| Handtekening(en) | Log in om details te zien |
| Beveiligingstype | Log in om details te zien |
| Beschrijving beveiliging | Log in om details te zien |
| Varianten | Log in om details te zien |
| Opmerkingen |
Glatz — known today as Kłodzko — was a German administrative and garrison town in Lower Silesia in 1921, and this note belongs to the vast wave of municipal Notgeld that flooded Germany during the post-WWI inflationary spiral. Cities and towns issued their own fractional notes when Reichsbank currency dried up at the local level; Glatz was one of hundreds doing exactly this. L. Schirmer was a local print house, and the decision to keep production in-town rather than contracting one of the major Notgeld printers was typical of smaller municipal issues.
The Grafschaft Glatz — County of Glatz — had passed between Bohemian, Habsburg, and Prussian hands repeatedly before 1921, finally becoming Polish territory after 1945 when the entire region was transferred under the Potsdam Agreement.