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| 正面描述 | Printed in dark red and cream on paper, the obverse carries a central vignette of a seated craftsman at a workbench, set within an octagonal frame and flanked on either side by the numeral '50' in bold letterpress. The upper portion bears the title legend and date text below three manuscript signatures, while elaborate foliate and scroll ornamental borders fill the lateral margins. A ribbon cartouche at the foot carries the town name 'SCHNEVERDINGEN' above a Low German dialect motto. |
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| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in the same two-colour scheme of dark red and cream, dominated by a large central oval medallion enclosing the bold denomination numeral '50' over a delicate floral spray underprint. Two ornamental ribbon banners — one at the top, one at the bottom — carry Low German dialect savings mottoes, while dense acanthus-leaf and floral vignettes fill the corners and lateral borders in a rich letterpress composition. The printer's imprint appears in small text at the very foot of the note. |
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Schneverdingen is a small Lüneburg Heath town, and its savings bank issuing emergency currency in 1921 is entirely typical of the Notgeld wave that swept German municipalities as postwar inflation began dismantling the Reichsmark's purchasing power. What distinguishes this piece slightly is the printer: Gebrüder Jänecke of Hannover was a serious commercial and securities printer, not a novelty house. Their work tends to show cleaner registration and more deliberate paper selection than the jobbing printers used by many smaller issuers.
The watermark security feature is worth noting — by 1921 many Notgeld pieces had abandoned such precautions entirely.