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| Issuer | Stadt Blankenhain (Thuringia) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1921 |
| Type | Local banknote |
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| Obverse description | Multicolour letterpress Notgeld vignette divided into three panels: at left, a landscape scene with a pond and bare trees beneath a loom or roller blind architectural element, with denomination cartouches reading '50 Pf' at lower left and right corners; at centre, the crowned arms of Blankenhain — a rampant white lion on blue field supported by red-mantled figures and surmounted by a crown — above a ribbon scroll inscribed 'Stadt Blankenhain i. Thür.' and a text panel below; at right, a craftsman seated at a potter's wheel working a vessel, with finished ceramics displayed on a shelf behind him. The header in red Fraktur script reads 'Blankenhain i. Thür.' flanked by validity notice at upper left and 'Gemeindevorstand' with a manuscript signature at upper right; the printer's imprint 'H. Stürtz A.G. Würzb.rg.' appears at the lower centre. |
|---|---|
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| Reverse lettering | Notgeld der Stadt Blankenhain i. Thür. 50 Pf. Umrauscht vom Haine hübsch und blank, lieg ich hier. Einst herrschten Grafen von Gleichen in mir. |
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| Comments |
Blankenhain's 1921 notgeld issue was one of thousands of municipal emergency currency pieces produced across Germany as the Reichsbank struggled to keep small-denomination coinage in circulation during the postwar inflation spiral. What distinguishes this particular issue is the printer: H. Stürtz AG in Würzburg was a university press, not a commercial banknote house, and its involvement reflects how far municipalities had to cast their nets when commissioning emergency currency. Engraver H. Oehler's credit on a notgeld piece is worth noting — such attributions are relatively uncommon at this denomination and issuer level.