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| 正面铭文 | ZWANZIG HELLER GUTSCHEIN DER GEMEINDE SONNBERG DIESE GUTSCHEINE WERDEN BIS 30. NOVEMBER 1920 BEI DER GEMEINDEKASSE IN GESETZLICHEM BARGELDE EINGELÖST. GESAMTAUFLAGE 20000 K G.R.B. v. 8. JULI 1920 20 20 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in green and dark brown, with a green guilloche border of interlaced floral and oval ornaments flanked by bold numeral "20" cartouches at the upper corners. The central vignette presents a black line-engraved alpine landscape with a prominent conical mountain peak at right and a rising sun with radiating rays emerging from behind a lower ridge at left. Below the vignette, a two-line inscription in flowing script identifies the issuer and denomination. |
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Sonnberg is a small village in Salzburg province, and its 1920 Heller note is a product of the acute small-change shortage that gripped Austria in the immediate postwar years. The collapse of the Habsburg monetary system left rural municipalities scrambling to produce their own emergency Kleingeld — the so-called Notgeld — because coins had been hoarded, melted, or simply ceased to be minted in useful denominations.
These municipal issues were typically authorized locally, printed in small runs, and redeemed within the issuing community once federal coinage returned. Sonnberg's participation in the scheme is itself a minor curiosity: the village was small enough that its notes would have circulated among a very limited number of hands.