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| 背面描述 | The reverse is dominated by a large letterpress vignette of the arched gateway to the Dömitz fortress, rendered in fine line engraving with detailed stonework, a central arched portal, flanking walls, and trees visible beyond. A light blue underprint washes the background, and a delicate interlaced ornamental border frames the entire composition. A two-line caption in German beneath the vignette identifies the scene as the fortress entrance where Fritz Reuter was imprisoned in 1839–40. |
| 背面铭文 | Eingang zur Festung, in welcher Fritz Reuter von 1839-40 gefangen saß. |
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Dömitz, a small garrison town on the Elbe in Mecklenburg, issued this Sparkasse Notgeld during the peak of Germany's postwar small-change crisis. Municipal savings banks — Sparkassen — were among the more cautious Notgeld issuers, typically waiting until the shortage became genuinely unmanageable before commissioning their own emergency scrip. W. Sandmeyer's Hofbuchdruckerei in Schwerin handled a number of Mecklenburg municipal issues during this period, producing workaday pieces with no particular artistic ambition.
The Dömitz fortress, one of the best-preserved Renaissance fortifications in northern Germany, sat largely idle by 1921 — a detail that puts the town's otherwise modest economic footprint into relief.