Katalog
Warum registrieren? Nur um Bots aus unserem Katalog fernzuhalten. Ihre E-Mail bleibt privat — wir geben sie nie weiter und senden Ihnen nichts Unerwünschtes. Das garantieren wir Ihnen!
| Emittent | Colectividad de Trabajadores de Pomar de Cinca |
|---|---|
| Jahr | |
| Typ | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Nennwert | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Währung | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Material | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Größe | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Form | Rectangular |
| Druckerei | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Designer | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Stecher | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Im Umlauf bis | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Referenz(en) | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Vorderseitenbeschreibung | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
|---|---|
| Vorderseitenlegende | Vale por 25 cts. |
| Rückseitenbeschreibung | The reverse, in matching plain orange card stock, is authenticated solely by a large circular hand-applied stamp in blue-violet ink. The outer ring of the stamp bears the legend 'Colectividad de Trabajadores — Pomar de Cinca (Hu...)' with a concentric inner ring surrounding a blank central field; no printed text or additional device appears elsewhere on this side. |
| Rückseitenlegende | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Unterschrift(en) | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Sicherheitsmerkmal | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Beschreibung der Sicherheitsmerkmale | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Varianten | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Anmerkungen |
Pomar de Cinca is a small municipality in the Huesca province of Aragon, and like hundreds of Spanish towns during the Civil War, its anarcho-syndicalist collective issued its own emergency fractional currency when coinage disappeared from circulation almost entirely after July 1936. These colectividad notes were locally produced — often on whatever card stock or heavy paper was available — with no central oversight and highly variable print quality. The CNT-affiliated collectives that ran much of Aragonese agriculture and commerce during 1936–1938 treated these small-denomination pieces as purely functional instruments to keep internal trade moving.
Surviving examples from tiny Aragonese villages like Pomar de Cinca are genuinely scarce; production runs were small, most wore out quickly, and the Francoist suppression of the collectives in 1938 ensured few were preserved intentionally.