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| 正面描述 | The left half carries a woodcut-style vignette of the Pfarrkirche (parish church) of Hall in Tirol, rendered in a street-level perspective with surrounding townhouses and figures in the foreground, captioned 'Pfarrkirche' at upper left. The right half is divided into ornamental panels with denomination numerals '20' and the abbreviation 'Hl' at upper and lower corners, flanking a central text block in Gothic blackletter script giving the issuing guarantee statement, date of issue, and two manuscript signatures for the Bürgermeister and Stadtkämmerer. The note was printed in the fourth issue ('4. Auflage') as noted at lower left. |
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| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in a rich woodcut style across three vertical panels. The left panel bears the Austrian shield (red-white-red) surmounted by a crown with flanking foliate ornament and the inscription 'AN' and 'EIN' at upper corners. The central panel presents a standing armoured figure, likely a knight or civic allegory, set within a dark arched niche. The right panel displays the Tyrolean eagle coat of arms with elaborate baroque scrollwork surround. The denomination '20 Hl' appears in large Gothic numerals at the lower centre. |
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Hall in Tirol was among the earliest Austrian municipalities to issue notgeld after the First World War, drawing on a long history of local monetary activity — the town had operated its own mint continuously from the thirteenth century until 1809, one of the longest-running civic minting traditions in the Alpine region. The 1920 series was printed by Wagner in Innsbruck rather than sourced from Vienna, a logistical choice common to Tyrolean municipalities that kept supply chains short during a period of acute paper and transport shortages.
The Jaksc/Pick reference IId designation places this within the second main type grouping of the Hall series, suggesting at least one earlier design revision.