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2 Mark Eutin PoW Camp

Issuer Offizier-Gefangenenlager Eutin
Year 1914-1918
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Value 2 Mark
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Obverse description Letterpress in black and red with a light blue guilloche underprint; black serial numbers at upper or lower margins. The German Imperial tricolour flag (black, white, and red) appears as a vignette at left. The denomination numeral '2' is printed in red at right.
Obverse lettering Offizier-Gefangenenlager
Eutin
Zwei Mark
Lagergeld
2
(Translation: Officers' Prisoner of War Camp Eutin. Two mark. Camp money.)
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Comments

Eutin, a small Schleswig-Holstein garrison town, hosted one of the German Empire's officer prisoner-of-war camps during the First World War. Under the 1907 Hague Convention, captured officers were entitled to pay commensurate with their rank — but the German authorities were not about to hand out Reichsmarks freely inside a camp. These internal scrip issues solved that problem: money valid only within the wire, usable at the canteen, and worthless the moment a prisoner escaped or was repatriated.

Officer camps typically generated far fewer surviving scrip examples than enlisted camps, simply because the populations were smaller and turnover slower.

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