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| Issuer | Gemeinde Paulinzella (Municipality of Paulinzella, Thuringia) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1921 |
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| Composition | Paper |
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| Obverse description | The face is rendered in a polychrome letterpress style typical of German Notgeld, with a central vignette of the Paulinzella monastery buildings set against a sunburst underprint in red-orange. Flanking the central image are two standing ecclesiastical figures in full episcopal vestments — mitres, crosiers, and red chasubles — one to each side, executed in a flat, medievalist illustrative manner. The large Gothic-script denomination numeral '50 Pf' occupies the lower central field, beneath which a text panel carries validity and issuing authority inscriptions; verse text in Gothic script runs along the upper and lower borders of the note. |
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| Obverse lettering | 2. Die und allen zum Trost, tritt ein! Es lenet deine Paulinzellaer Notgeld Gültig bis zum 31. März 1922 der Gemeindevorstand Schritte in dies' friedliche Tal sicher dein gutes Gestirn |
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| Comments |
Paulinzella is a village of a few hundred inhabitants built around the ruins of a Benedictine monastery founded in 1105 — one of the more complete Romanesque ruins in central Germany. During the inflation-era Notgeld frenzy, even settlements this small could issue their own emergency currency, and many did so with obvious awareness that collectors, not local shopkeepers, were the primary audience.
The Johannes Arndt press in Jena handled a substantial volume of Thuringian Notgeld commissions in this period. The "Issue 2" designation confirms a prior series existed, meaning Paulinzella returned to press at least twice — unusual for a municipality with essentially no economic weight of its own.