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| 正面描述 | Letterpress-printed note in black ink over a yellow underprint with geometric border framing the entire face. An oval coat of arms of the Spanish Republic is positioned at the upper left, flanked by the issuing authority's name and denomination text in bold lettering. The body carries the full obligation text of the Municipal Council of Ayódar in a structured typographic layout. |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | Consejo Municipal de Ayódar Este Consejo reconoce a favor del portador la cantidad de CINCUENTA Céntimos De circulación obligatoria en la localidad y a canjear en la Caja municipal (Translation: Municipal Council of Ayódar This Council recognizes in favor of the bearer the amount of Fifty Centimos Mandatory circulation in the town and to be exchanged at the Municipal Fund) |
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Ayódar is a small municipality in Castellón province, and like hundreds of similar towns across Republican-held Spain, it issued its own emergency fractional currency during the Civil War to address a severe shortage of small coin — silver and copper having vanished from circulation almost immediately after July 1936. These local emissions were authorized under a 1936 decree permitting municipalities to print their own low-denomination notes, which produced an extraordinary patchwork of hyper-local paper across the Republican zone.
The Gari catalogue remains the principal reference for these Castellón municipal issues. Survivorship is often a matter of luck rather than quantity printed — small-town emissions were rarely redeemed formally, and many simply disappeared with the communities that issued them.