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| 表面の説明 | The obverse is laid out within a decorative border, with vertical ornamental panels at left and right bearing stylized Gothic architectural motifs and a skull device at lower left. The central field carries a mottled grey-green underprint over which two Low German dialect inscriptions are set in blackletter script flanking a large central vignette: a circular guilloche medallion enclosing antler motifs and the bold numeral '50'. The denomination '50 Pf.' appears in dark panels at each upper corner, while the heading 'Not-Geld Ritterhude' runs across the top in large blackletter capitals. A panel at the base bears the validity clause, the place-name and date 'Ritterhude 1921', a serial number with prefix 'A', and a manuscript signature above the title 'Gemeindevorsteher'. |
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| 表面の銘文 | Not-Geld Ritterhude 50 Pf. Is de Not ok harnig grot Michel lat den Kopp nich hangen raff di up den mutt nich hangen Dieses Notgeld verliert seine Gültigkeit 2 Monate nach erfolgter Aufkündigung in dem Kreisblatt für den Kreis Osterholz, den Bremer Nachrichten und der deutschen Sparkassenzeitung. Die Sparkasse Hannover Ritterhude 1921 Nr. A Gemeindevorsteher |
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| 偽造防止技術 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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Ritterhude is a small village north of Bremen, and its decision to issue notgeld in 1921 was purely practical — the postwar small-change shortage had still not resolved itself by that point, and municipalities across northern Germany were filling the gap themselves rather than waiting on the Reichsbank. Casten & Suhling, a Bremen printing firm, handled several of these local commissions in the region, which kept unit costs manageable for communities too small to justify bespoke production runs.
The 1921 date places this in the later wave of municipal notgeld, by which point many issues had become as much a collector phenomenon as a circulating necessity — something the issuers knew and occasionally exploited.