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| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in brown on a pale green guilloche underprint with a light geometric diaper pattern, framed by a dashed inner rectangle and a fine outer border. The numeral denomination "5000000 Mark" in large blackletter figures occupies the centre against a ruled horizontal band. Above the denomination a single line of text announces the redemption notice, while below it a multi-line counterfeit warning in Fraktur script sets out the legal penalties for forgery. |
| 背面铭文 | Der Zeitpunkt der Einlösung wird öffentlich bekannt gemacht. 5000000 Mark Wer Gutscheine nachmacht oder verfälscht oder nachgemachte oder verfälschte sich verschafft und in den Verkehr bringt, wird mit Zuchthaus nicht unter zwei Jahren bestraft. |
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Pirmasens was the center of Germany's shoe manufacturing industry, and its municipal emergency money during the hyperinflation of 1923 reflects the desperation of that period with unusual clarity. By August 1923, the Reichsmark was collapsing so fast that local authorities — cities, towns, even private firms — were legally permitted to issue their own Notgeld to keep commerce moving when official currency simply couldn't be printed fast enough to match price increases.
A five-million mark note from a shoe-town municipality is mundane in one sense; dozens of German cities issued denominations at this scale that summer. What makes Pirmasens issues worth noting is how rapidly even these notes became inadequate — within weeks of printing, five million marks wouldn't cover a loaf of bread.