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20 Heller/20 Filler Nagymegyer; PoW Camp

Issuer K.u.K. Kriegsgefangenenlager Nagymegyer (Imperial and Royal Prisoner of War Camp Nagymegyer)
Year 1916
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Printer Globus, Budapest
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Obverse description Black letterpress on yellow underprint. The Austro-Hungarian Empire coat of arms is positioned at top centre, above bilingual denomination and camp text in German. The note carries a validity restriction clause and is dated 1 July 1916, with spaces for the signatures of the Economic Officer, Camp Commander, and Deposit Manager.
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Reverse lettering 20 XELERA 20 HELLERA
Cs.es kir hadifogolytábor
Nagymegyer
Husz fillér
mely összeg a hadifoglyok részéről a táborparancsnokságnál letétbe helyezett vagyonnak egy részét képezi
CSAKIS A HADIFOGOLY-TÁBORBAN ÉRVÉNYES
NAGYMEGYER, 1916. JÚLIUS 1.
GAZDÁSZATI TISZT
TÁBORPARANCSNOK
A TÁBORI ÉRTÉKJEGYEK UTÁNZÁSA KATONAI BÜNTETŐJOGILAG BÜNTETTETIK
GLOBUS BUDAPEST
LETÉTKEZELŐ
(Translation: 20 heller. Imperial and Royal prisoner of war camp Nagymegyer. Twenty filler which amount forms part of the assets deposited by the prisoners of war with the camp command. Valid only in the prisoner of war camp. Nagymegyer, 1 July 1916. Economic Officer / Camp Commander / Deposit Manager. Forgery of camp notes is punished by military criminal law.)
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Comments

Nagymegyer, in present-day Slovakia, housed one of the Austro-Hungarian military's network of prisoner-of-war camps during the First World War. The K.u.K. administration issued these fractional camp notes to control internal purchasing power — preventing prisoners from accumulating currency usable outside the wire. The dual denomination (Heller for Austrian reckoning, Filler for Hungarian) reflects the empire's awkward monetary union, where both terms described the same hundredth-of-a-Krone unit depending on which half of the k.u.k. apparatus was doing the paperwork.

Globus was a well-established Budapest commercial printer, not a security press — which shows in the relatively simple execution typical of the lower-denomination camp scrip series.

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