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| 正面描述 | The obverse is dominated by a central cartouche bearing the inscription 'SOLBAD' at the top and a three-line verse in German gothic script reading 'Sol heißt die Sonne / Sole das Salz – / Zur Menschheit Wonne / Suderode behalt's!', flanked on both sides by the denomination numeral '25' over 'Pfg' set against decorative guilloche underprint panels. The serial number, printed in red, appears in the upper right alongside the series letter 'C', with the issuing authority text 'Bad Suderode Harz' and the date '10. Mai 1921' in the lower right, and the validity clause 'Dieser Gutschein verliert seine Gültigkeit 3 Monate nach öffentlichem Aufruf' in the lower left. The printer's imprint 'Louis Koch & Halberstadt' is typeset at the foot of the note. |
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| 正面铭文 | Gutschein C. 152108 SOLBAD 25 Pfg Sol heißt die Sonne Sole das Salz – Zur Menschheit Wonne Suderode behalt's! Dieser Gutschein verliert seine Gültigkeit 3 Monate nach öffentlichem Aufruf Bad Suderode Harz den 10. Mai 1921 Der Gemeindevorstand LOUIS KOCH & HALBERSTADT |
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| 备注 |
Bad Suderode was a small spa town in the Harz region whose municipal authorities, like hundreds of German localities, issued their own emergency small change during the Kleingeldnot of the early 1920s. The Reichsbank's inability to supply adequate coinage — driven first by wartime metal shortages and then by accelerating inflation — forced towns to print Notgeld or face commercial paralysis at the counter level. Louis Koch in Halberstadt was a regional printer who handled commissions for several Harz municipalities during this period.
The P# reference suffix "-3/10" suggests this is one of a set, likely three known types within a larger series of ten.