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50 Pfennigs E. Bornemann

Uitgever E. Bornemann & Co. G.m.b.H., Bad Rehburg (Prussian province of Hanover)
Jaar 1921
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Vorm Log in om details te zien
Drukker EMTW Meinberg, Ilsede
Ontwerper(s) Log in om details te zien
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Beschrijving keerzijde Central panel on a black ground carries a bold allegorical silhouette composition of two figures flanking a sunburst rising over a stylised coat of arms, evoking a Jugendstil graphic idiom. The denomination numeral 50 appears in large red figures in each of the four corners against a yellow ground, forming a decorative border frame. The left text panel contains the issue and validity details dated Bad Rehburg, 1.12.1921, with the issuer's name E. Bornemann & Co. G.m.b.H.; the right panel carries a Low German verse attributed to Klaus Groth, and a split banner inscription across the top and bottom reads SOLLTE·ES·DER·EDLE;·ECH- / TE·SANCT·URBANER·SEIN?
Opschrift keerzijde SOLLTE·ES·DER·EDLE;·ECH-
TE·SANCT·URBANER·SEIN?
Dieser Gutschein verliert seine Gültigkeit am 1. 6. 1922.
Bad Rehburg, den 1.12.1921.
E. Bornemann & Co. G. m. b. H.
Hoch oder platt, drög oder natt, groff oder fien, awer echt mutt et sin.
Klaus Groth.
50
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Opmerkingen

Bad Rehburg was a small spa town in Lower Saxony whose local businesses issued Notgeld during the early Weimar inflation years largely because the Reichsbank simply could not keep small-denomination coinage in circulation — metal was being hoarded or melted down faster than it could be minted. E. Bornemann & Co., a local commercial firm rather than a financial institution, took the practical step of issuing their own 50 Pfennig notes redeemable against their own credit.

The printer, EMTW Meinberg at the Ilsede ironworks complex, was an industrial operation that took on Notgeld contracts across the Hanover region during this period — an unusual arrangement that placed currency printing alongside heavy metallurgy.

MISSCHIEN OOK INTERESSANT