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| 背面描述 | The German-language side of the original Austro-Hungarian Bank 1902-dated 1000 Kronen note, with an oval portrait vignette of a young woman at left rendered in fine intaglio engraving. The Austrian coat of arms is centred in the upper portion, flanked by repeated denomination panels reading "EZER KORONA" and "1000". The text "AZ OSZTRAK-MAGYAR BANK E BANKJEGYERT BARKI KIVANSAGARA AZONNAL EZES ES BUDAPESTI FOINTEZETEINEL" appears in the lower inscription band. |
| 背面铭文 | EZER KORONA OSZTRAK-MAGYAR BANK |
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This note was issued by the Oesterreichisch-ungarische Bank in the final, technically defunct phase of the Austro-Hungarian monetary union. By 1919, the successor states had already begun stamping circulating Austro-Hungarian banknotes with their own overprints to claim them as national currency — Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Romania, and Austria each ran separate stamping operations, often chaotically, in the first months after dissolution. An unstamped 1000 Kronen note like this one occupied a genuinely ambiguous legal position depending on where it was held.
The Oesterreichisch-ungarische Bank was formally liquidated in 1922, but by then the inflation trajectory in the successor states had already rendered the denomination largely academic.