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50 Pfennig

发行方 Sparkasse der Stadt Belgard
年份
类型 Local banknote
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正面描述 The upper portion carries the account designation 'Konto D' at left and a serial number at right, flanking a central heraldic vignette of the Belgard coat of arms — a rearing griffin on a shield — set within elaborate acanthus scrollwork in ochre and dark brown. Two large oval denomination medallions reading '50 Pf.' appear at left and right within dotted borders. The lower section contains a framed text panel in Gothic script with the issuer's payment obligation, the place name 'Belgard' at lower left, and the printer's imprint 'Flemming-Wiskott A.-G. Glogau' at the foot of the note.
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背面描述 The reverse is dominated by a finely engraved panoramic townscape of Belgard reproduced after the Lubinsche Karte of 1618, showing the town's skyline with a prominent church steeple, surrounding buildings, fields, and the Persante river in the foreground, with the inscription 'Persante Fluß' noted in the landscape. The central vignette is framed by decorative side borders of interlaced foliate scrollwork in ochre and brown, with the denomination '50' printed vertically in the outer margins. A caption banner below the vignette reads 'Nach der Lubin'schen Karte 1618', and the registered design number 'D.R.G.M. 795679' appears at the foot.
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Belgard an der Persante — today Białogard in northwestern Poland — was a small Pomeranian town whose municipal savings bank issued this Notgeld during the inflationary emergency of the early 1920s. Flemming & Wiskott in Glogau were among the more prolific regional printers of German emergency currency, supplying dozens of smaller municipalities that lacked access to the major Frankfurt or Berlin printing houses.

The 90 × 60 mm format is on the smaller end of Notgeld production, consistent with fractional pfennig issues intended for genuine small-change circulation rather than the collector-targeted Serienscheine that flooded the market from 1921 onward.

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