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| 表面の説明 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 裏面の説明 | The reverse carries a humorous multi-figure vignette in grey-blue and orange, signed by artist Arno Grimm at lower left, showing three hunters in animated poses struggling over a hare lying on the ground — a visual pun on local Thuringian dialect. To the right, within an arched niche, stands an elderly woman in traditional dress observing a cat, captioned 'Fama'. The denomination wreath medallion with '50' in orange appears at upper centre, suspended by orange ribbons, and the full-width lower panel bears the inscription in Fraktur script. |
| 裏面の銘文 | Mer hunn, mer hunn! Fuenfzig Pfennig der Stadt Bürgel/Th Fama |
| 署名 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 偽造防止技術 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 偽造防止の説明 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| バリエーション | ログイン して詳細を見る |
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Bürgel's third issue in its Hunting Series belongs to a wave of municipal Kleingeldscheine that flooded Germany in 1921 as coin shortages, driven by wartime metal requisitions and postwar hoarding, left small-denomination transactions nearly impossible. Cities, towns, and even individual firms printed their own emergency fractional notes, often using them as a simultaneous exercise in local promotion — collectors were a known audience, and municipalities leaned into it.
Arno Grimm's involvement and local printing by Kunstanstalt Alfred Eisenach, a Bürgel-based commercial art printer, kept this series unusually close to home. The thematic coherence across the three issues is deliberate; hunting imagery had deep roots in Thuringian civic identity.