Helmbrechts is a small textile town in Upper Franconia, Bavaria, and this 50 Pfennig note is a product of the Notgeld wave that swept German municipalities between 1918 and 1922 — a period when the Reichsbank's coin supply had been utterly consumed by wartime metal demands and postwar hoarding. Town councils were left to paper over the gap themselves, literally. The Stadtrat issued these under its own authority, validating them with the municipal seal in place of any central banking guarantee.
At roughly the size of a large postage stamp, the physical object reflects the cost-cutting reality of emergency municipal printing.
Helmbrechts is a small textile town in Upper Franconia, Bavaria, and this 50 Pfennig note is a product of the Notgeld wave that swept German municipalities between 1918 and 1922 — a period when the Reichsbank's coin supply had been utterly consumed by wartime metal demands and postwar hoarding. Town councils were left to paper over the gap themselves, literally. The Stadtrat issued these under its own authority, validating them with the municipal seal in place of any central banking guarantee.
At roughly the size of a large postage stamp, the physical object reflects the cost-cutting reality of emergency municipal printing.