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| Issuer | Consejo Municipal de Dalías |
|---|---|
| Year | 1937 |
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| Size | 100 × 55 mm |
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| Obverse description | Typeset letterpress emergency scrip printed in green and blue ink on plain paper. A geometric rule border frames the entire face; the issuer name, underlined, appears at the top, followed by the payment obligation text in a plain serifed typeface. The layout is characteristically austere, consistent with Spanish Civil War-era municipal emergency currency. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | CONSEJO MUNICIPAL DE DALÍAS Pagará al portador en billetes del Banco de España la cantidad de 25 céntimos (Translation: Municipal Council of Dalías Will pay the bearer in banknotes of the Bank of Spain the amount of 25 Centimos) |
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| Comments |
Dalías is a small agricultural municipality in Almería, and like hundreds of similarly sized Republican councils during the Civil War, it issued its own emergency fractional currency in 1937 when metal coinage had effectively vanished from circulation. These hyper-local emissions were a direct consequence of the hoarding crisis that followed the July 1936 uprising — silver and copper disappeared almost immediately, leaving town councils to improvise.
Consejo Municipal issues from villages this small rarely survived in quantity. They circulated hard among a tight population, and few were preserved with any care once the war ended and the peseta was reimposed under Franco.