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| 正面铭文 | Vor diesem Turm der Festung Cüstrin wurde 1730 Ltnt. v. Katte im Beisein des Kronprinzen Friedrich hingerichtet Stadt Cüstrin 1. Februar 1921. Der Magistrat: Seiuvius Gültig bis spätestens 2 Monate nach bekanntgegebenem Einlösungstermin. |
| 背面描述 | The divided municipal coat of arms of Cüstrin occupies the centre, with a Brandenburgian eagle on the dexter half and a leaping fish on the sinister half, set against a purple ground; oak sprigs flank the shield on either side, and a panoramic vignette of the Oder river landscape with town silhouette and windmill appears behind the lower portion of the arms. A banner header reads 'Notgeld der Stadt Cüstrin' in Gothic script, and denomination numerals '50' appear in circular cartouches at lower left and right flanking the central 'Fünfzig Pfennig' inscription. The printer's imprint FLEMMING-WISKOTTA G. GLOGAU is typeset below the lower border. |
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Küstrin's 50 Pfennig notgeld from 1921 is one of thousands of municipal emergency issues printed during the postwar inflation spiral, but the Schiestl design attribution gives it modest distinction — Heinz Schiestl was a Munich-based graphic artist and woodcut illustrator whose work appeared on several notgeld commissions of the period, bringing a deliberate folk-art quality unusual in what was essentially disposable currency.
Carl Flemming & T. C. Wiskott in Glogau was a well-established commercial printer with deep roots in map and illustrated publishing, and their production quality on small-denomination notgeld was generally reliable. The city of Küstrin itself — a fortress town at the confluence of the Oder and Warthe — was ceded to Germany under Versailles but would later be absorbed into Poland as Kostrzyn nad Odrą after 1945.