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| 正面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 正面铭文 | NOTGELD DER GEMEINDE HASLOH COM. AMTSBEZIRK PINNEBERG DIESER SCHEIN VERLIERT SEINE GÜLTIGKEIT ZWEI WOCHEN NACH AUFRUF IN PINNEBERGER TAGEBLATT U. LOCKSTEDTER ANZEIGER pf 25 pf Der Finanzausschuß i. A. Stahlen Der com. Amtsvorsteher Pet. |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is dominated by an all-over geometric underprint of overlapping diagonal lattice bands forming a continuous diamond-grid pattern in dark ink. Within a central white lozenge vignette, a stylised Art Deco scene drawn from Goethe's Faust II shows three figures — a standing robed figure, a kneeling supplicant, and a seated crowned figure — rendered in clean outline. The denomination '25 Pf' appears in bold display numerals to the right of the vignette, with the literary quotation and its attribution printed in block lettering beneath the scene. |
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Hasloh is a village in Schleswig-Holstein — in 1921, a genuinely small settlement, which makes this note one of the more obscure entries in the vast German Notgeld catalogues. The explosion of municipal emergency currency that year was partly practical and partly philatelic speculation; many Gemeinden issued attractive small-denomination notes knowing collectors would absorb them, generating revenue while little paper ever entered actual trade.
Konrad Hanf was a Hamburg commercial printer who handled numerous Notgeld commissions for northern German municipalities during this period, none of them particularly distinguished in execution.