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| 正面描述 | The obverse is printed in brown and black on cream paper, with an ornate baroque border of scrollwork, stylised columns, and floral garlands framing the central vignette. Within a circular cartouche at centre, a detailed letterpress view of the Neuötting market square is rendered, with the tall Gothic tower of the parish church of St. Nicholas rising behind a broad civic building. The denomination '50 PFENNIG' appears in bold Gothic type at the left, and a validity clause in German script occupies the right panel, while the issuing legend 'NOTGELD DER STADT NEÜOTTING AM INN.' is inscribed in a rectangular panel at the foot. |
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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is divided into three vertical panels, the wide central panel carrying a detailed letterpress vignette of the historic Burghausener Tor, a medieval gatehouse tower with a clock face, flanked by period townhouses along a cobbled street. The left panel bears a serial number within a decorative cartouche surmounted by the coloured municipal arms of Neuötting, with the denomination 'FÜNFZIG PFENNIG' below. The right panel contains an oval vignette of a small baroque wayside shrine or chapel with a red roof, set within a similar ornamental cartouche, again inscribed 'FÜNFZIG PFENNIG', with the city name 'STADT NEUÖTTING AM INN.' at the top and the printer's imprint along the lower margin. |
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Neuötting am Inn is a small Bavarian market town on the Inn River, directly across from its larger neighbor Altötting — one of the most important Catholic pilgrimage sites in Germany. This 50 Pfennig Notgeld note was issued during the acute small-change shortage that gripped Germany in the early 1920s as inflation accelerated and metal coinage effectively vanished from circulation. Municipalities, merchants, and local authorities across Germany printed millions of these emergency pieces to keep everyday commerce moving.
J. Adolf Schwarz of Lindenberg im Allgäu was a regional printer responsible for a number of Bavarian Notgeld issues from this period, not a major security printer — which is exactly the point. These were practical stopgaps, produced locally and fast.