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| 正面描述 | Central vignette of a bishop saint rendered in a woodcut-style intaglio technique, shown frontally in full vestments with mitre and halo, holding the arms of Aschaffenburg (red shield with a white wagon wheel) in his left hand and the blue-and-white lozengy arms of Bavaria in his right. Two scrolling banners flank the upper field with the denomination numeral '25' in large gothic figures at lower left and right, a serial number at lower left, and the city name 'Aschaffenburg' in bold red Gothic script at centre base. The legend 'Gültig bis auf Widerruf' appears beneath the central figure, with a facsimile signature of the Stadtrat at lower right. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is divided into a grid of six decorative panels surrounding a large central vignette, all printed in a multicolour woodcut style. The central panel, set against a dark stippled background, contains a full-length figure of a Spessart huntsman or wanderer in period costume, carrying a spear and blowing a horn. The four corner panels carry vignettes of forest wildlife — a stag and leaping deer in the upper panels, and wild boars in the lower panels — while the two lateral middle panels bear the denomination '25 Pf.' in bold black lettering on a gold ground. The upper and lower borders of the central vignette carry the motto 'Frisch auf' and 'In Spessart' in red Gothic script, and the printer's imprint appears along the lower margin. |
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Aschaffenburg's Notgeld issues from the early 1920s inflation period were contracted to H. Stürtz in Würzburg, one of the more respected regional academic presses in Bavaria — a slightly elevated choice for emergency scrip, which shows in the print quality of the series. Matthäus Schiestl was a Munich-based illustrator with a strong grounding in Jugendstil and ecclesiastical graphic work; his involvement in Notgeld design was not unusual for the period, when city councils raided the same pool of regional commercial artists to dress up what were essentially stopgap instruments.
The Stadtrat issued these notes under the municipal emergency currency framework that proliferated across Germany after central coin supplies collapsed — Aschaffenburg being a mid-sized Franconian town with no particular monetary history of its own.