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| 背面描述 | A woodcut-style vignette in green and red-pink tones occupies the central field, illustrating a medieval naval battle with armored soldiers clashing between two vessels on stylized waves. A scrolling ribbon banner arches across the upper portion of the scene bearing the Fraktur inscription 'Gottes Freund und aller Welt Feind', and a handwritten serial number appears in the upper right corner. |
| 背面铭文 | Gottes Freund und aller Welt Feind (Translation: God's friend and everyone's enemy) |
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Vereinigte Lichtspiele — "United Cinema" — was a regional movie theater operator in the Wilhelmshaven and Rüstringen area, and this Notgeld note is a product of the hyperinflationary emergency that pushed hundreds of German municipalities, businesses, and institutions into printing their own small-denomination scrip during 1921–1923. That a cinema chain issued its own currency is not as strange as it sounds: any entity with a recognizable name and a local customer base could, and often did, produce Notgeld to cover the chronic shortage of small change.
Allmers in Varel was a regional print shop that handled numerous such commissions across Lower Saxony. The note is valid-area scrip rather than a municipal issue — redeemable only through the issuer, which gave the theater operator both a practical tool and a form of advertising.