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| 正面铭文 | Burg a.d. Wupper BURG B.M. SIEGEL ET FREIHEIT Burg a.d. Wupper 1. XII. 1921 Der Bürgermeister 50 Pf Gültig bis 1. IV. 22 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse carries a halftone photographic reproduction printed in sepia, executed using the 'Farbfoto' technique. The vignette illustrates the historical scene of 8 November 1225, in which entry to the castle is refused to the body of the murdered Archbishop Engelbert, with mounted figures visible on a drawbridge before a fortified gate. A caption in Gothic script runs along the lower border of the image, with the full explanatory legend printed in larger Gothic typeface beneath. |
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Burg an der Wupper was a small industrial town in the Bergisches Land, best known for its blade and tool manufacturing. This 50 Pfennig note belongs to the enormous wave of municipal Kleingeldscheine issued across Germany in 1921, when chronic coin shortages — driven by postwar metal scarcity and rampant hoarding — forced even minor local authorities to print their own fractional currency. The Reichsbank had neither the capacity nor the inclination to solve the problem quickly.
The DeNG catalog reference places this firmly in the documented Notgeld series for the town, which was administratively merged into Solingen in 1975.