Catalog
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| Issuer | Kötzting, Market Town of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1918 |
| Type | Emergency coin |
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|---|---|
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| Obverse lettering | MARKTGEMEINDE ✠ KÖTZTING ✠ |
| Reverse description | The reverse displays the large bold numeral '50' occupying the central field, denoting the denomination in Pfennig. The field exhibits a lightly striated or textured surface around the numeral. A circular legend along the upper periphery reads KRIEGSMÜNZE (war coin), while PFENNIG appears along the lower periphery, with cross ornaments as dividers. The entire design is enclosed within a beaded border, consistent with the Notgeld emergency coinage aesthetic of the World War I period. |
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| Additional information |
Kötzting issued this zinc notgeld piece in 1918 as the German imperial economy buckled under wartime metal requisitions. By that stage, copper and nickel had been systematically stripped from circulation for military use, forcing hundreds of small municipalities — market towns included — to produce their own emergency coinage under authorization from regional authorities. Zinc was the compromise material: abundant enough, but notoriously difficult to strike cleanly and prone to corrosion, which accounts for the frequency of pitted or oxidized survivors from this series.