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| 正面描述 | Central vignette presents a detailed pen-and-ink style illustration of Schloss Bernau on the Traun river, set within an ornate scrollwork border. The denomination '50' is printed in large red numerals at the top centre beneath the inscription 'HELLER' in bold Gothic lettering. Flanking the central vignette are two heraldic shield vignettes — a bull to the left and a fish to the right — with historical ownership chronologies of the estate listed in Gothic script along both side panels, and descriptive text about the municipality of Fischlham on the right. |
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| 正面铭文 | HELLER 50 Fischlham Schloss Bernau a. d. Traun. Die Pernauer-1406 Anhanger-1470 Joerger-1485 Oberhaimber-1530 Jaegenreuther 1617 Spindler-1730 Eußberg-1763 Gabelkoven-1772 Spindler-1798 Anacker-1810 Tieffenthaller-1907 Theuer. Fischlham am Traun-u. Almflusse, erscheint urkundlich 1179 Vischenhaim genannt. Gemeinde in Österreich ob der Enns, mit den Ortschaften: Eggenberg, Forstberg, Hafeld, Heitzing, Ornharting, Seebach, Zausset, 835 Einwohner, 163 Häuser 347 m Seehöhe. |
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Fischlham is a small rural municipality in Upper Austria, and this 50 Heller note is a product of the Notgeld wave that swept Austrian communities between 1919 and 1921 — a direct consequence of the coin shortages that followed the collapse of the Habsburg monetary system after the First World War. Municipalities, businesses, and institutions issued their own small-denomination emergency paper because official coinage had effectively vanished from everyday commerce.
Karl Stinglmair signed as the responsible local authority. The Jaksc/Pick reference JPR0203II-50 places this within the second series from Fischlham, suggesting the community issued at least two rounds of Notgeld.