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| 正面描述 | Tan-toned notgeld printed in dark brown on plain paper, with a decorative scroll border enclosing the design. A central vignette presents a line-engraved view of Schloss Ritzebüttel, the historic castle of Cuxhaven, captioned below the image. The denomination '50 Pfennig.' appears in large Gothic script at upper left and upper right, with the issuance place 'Cuxhaven.' and date 'im Oktober 1919.' at right, and the validity clause 'Gültig bis 31. 12. 1920.' at left. A serial number and the manuscript signature of Der Magistrat appear in the lower portion. |
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| 正面铭文 | 50 Pfennig. Gültig bis 31. 12. 1920. Schloss Ritzebüttel Dieser Gutschein wird von unserer Stadtkasse eingelöst. No Cuxhaven, im Oktober 1919. Der Magistrat: H. O. Persiehl, Hamburg. |
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Cuxhaven's 1919 Notgeld issue is one of thousands of municipal emergency currency pieces printed across Germany during the immediate postwar collapse, when coin metal had been systematically stripped for war production and the Reichsbank lacked the capacity to fill the gap at the local level. Persiehl in Hamburg was a workhorse printer for northern German Notgeld series — affordable, quick, and close enough that small municipalities could manage the logistics without Berlin's involvement.
The 1921 Notgeld reform effectively killed most of these issues within two years of printing.