Thuringia was one of several German federal states that retained nominal fiscal autonomy under the Nazi regime long after meaningful political independence had been extinguished. This 500 Reichsmark bond issued by the Thuringian Ministry of Finance in 1941 is a product of that administrative fiction — the state government still issuing debt instruments in its own name while operating entirely within the Reich's wartime financial apparatus.
Giesecke & Devrient, with facilities in both Leipzig and Berlin, handled a substantial portion of German government securities printing through the war years. The Leipzig plant was severely damaged in Allied bombing raids by 1943–1944, which adds a quiet context to anything they produced in the earlier war period.
Thuringia was one of several German federal states that retained nominal fiscal autonomy under the Nazi regime long after meaningful political independence had been extinguished. This 500 Reichsmark bond issued by the Thuringian Ministry of Finance in 1941 is a product of that administrative fiction — the state government still issuing debt instruments in its own name while operating entirely within the Reich's wartime financial apparatus.
Giesecke & Devrient, with facilities in both Leipzig and Berlin, handled a substantial portion of German government securities printing through the war years. The Leipzig plant was severely damaged in Allied bombing raids by 1943–1944, which adds a quiet context to anything they produced in the earlier war period.