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| 正面描述 | The left half of the note is occupied by a letterpress vignette of the Julienturm, a medieval stone tower ruin set against a cloudy sky with a lone figure standing at its base amid trees and foliage, captioned 'JULIENTURM.' at upper left. To the right, the issuer name 'Gemeinde Hinterbrühl.' is printed in Gothic blackletter at the top, followed by the denomination inscription 'Gutschein über 25 Heller.' in large blackletter type. Below, a redemption text states that the municipality guarantees payment in legal tender by 31 August 1920, with the facsimile titles and names of the Bürgermeister (Sittner), Vize-Bürgermeister (Berghold), and Finanzreferent (Reiter) printed beneath. The entire note is framed by a dashed rectangular border. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse carries a printed form in brown ink on plain paper stock, laid out in a tabular grid format. The left column bears references to a Landesregierung dated 10./4. 1920 and the abbreviation 'Z. B.' alongside the word 'Zimmerbrand'. The remaining columns are divided into numbered boxes (ranging from 53 to 74 as visible), each labelled 'ganzer Zimmerbrand' with weekly date ranges, indicating this side served as a fuel ration coupon register. A header section at the top contains blank fields for Gasse, Straße Nr., and Platz, as well as a customer list number line reading 'Nr. ............... der Kundenliste.' |
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Hinterbrühl is a small market town south of Vienna, best known as the site of the Seegrotte — the largest underground lake in Europe, formed by a flooding accident in 1912. This 25 Heller note belongs to the vast wave of Austrian municipal notgeld issued from 1916 onward, when the wartime coin shortage became acute enough that even villages of a few hundred residents were authorized to print their own emergency fractional currency. The Jaksc/Pick reference places it firmly within the Lower Austrian series.
Small-commune notgeld like this rarely survived in quantity — most were redeemed and pulped once coin circulation resumed in the early 1920s.