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| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 裏面の説明 | Olive-brown letterpress reverse centred on an oval vignette of the Oberammergau village panorama with the distinctive onion-domed parish church set against a mountain backdrop, the word 'GUTSCHEIN' arching above within the oval. Flanking allegorical figures — a farmer at left and a craftsman with hammer at right — rise amid stylised foliate scrollwork, with the denomination '25 PFENNIG' across the top. Two facsimile signatures appear along the lower border, with the printer's imprint 'BRENDAMOUR, SIMHART & CO. MÜNCHEN.' at the very foot of the note. |
| 裏面の銘文 | 25 PFENNIG 25 GUTSCHEIN 1. BÜRGERMEISTER 2. BÜRGERMEISTER BRENDAMOUR, SIMHART & CO. MÜNCHEN. |
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| 偽造防止技術 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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Oberammergau's 1921 Notgeld issue is inseparable from the town's identity as home to the Passion Play, performed every decade since 1634 in fulfillment of a plague vow. The 1920 production — delayed from 1910 by the First World War — drew international visitors at precisely the moment Germany's postwar inflation was making small-denomination coinage effectively unusable. The municipality issued these notes into that gap.
Brendamour, Simhart & Co. were among Munich's foremost art printing firms, responsible for some of the more carefully produced Bavarian Notgeld of the period. The quality of execution on this series reflects that reputation.