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| 正面描述 | Orange and violet Notgeld on cream paper, enclosed within a braided rope border. The central vignette presents the municipal coat of arms of Zons within an ornate cartouche: the upper shield quarters a cross and checkered field with a mounted knight, while the lower roundel carries a figural scene; large violet numerals '50' flank the arms on both sides above the denomination 'Pfennig.' Two scroll banners at the foot bear the issue and redemption text, with an issuance date 'Zons, den 1. Okt. 21.' at lower left, the expiry date '31. März 1922' at centre, and the Bürgermeister's manuscript signature at lower right; the designer's name 'H. Lütckens' appears in the upper right margin. |
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| 背面铭文 | Zons um 1400 |
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Zons — properly Rheinzons, a late medieval river-customs town on the west bank of the Rhine — was one of hundreds of German municipalities to issue Notgeld during the hyperinflationary spiral of the early 1920s. The Stadt Zons 50 Pfennig of 1921 was printed by Dr. Linnemann & Co. in Köln, a firm that handled a substantial volume of municipal emergency currency for the Rhineland during this period.
Designer H. Lütckens is associated with several Rhineland Notgeld commissions, though attribution details remain sparse in the literature. Zons itself was notable enough as a preserved medieval fortified town that its Notgeld became moderately sought by the Scheinsammler — collectors who pursued regional series for their local imagery rather than monetary value, a collecting habit that was already well established by 1921.