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| Issuer | Stadtrat Ansbach (City Council of Ansbach) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1921 |
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| Composition | Paper |
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|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | 75 PFENNIG 1221 1921 JUBILÄUMS=NOTGELD=DER=KREISHAUPTSTADT=ANSBACH NUR·MIT·DER·AMTL·NUMMER· GILTIG·BIS·AUF·WIDERRUF ·STADTRAT·12·8·21· RECHTSK·1·BÜRGERMEISTER |
| Reverse description | Orange ground with an expansive black silhouette vignette executed in a bold woodcut style. A mounted rider — rendered as the allegorical figure of Death bearing a scythe — gallops at full stride across a landscape strewn with small figures and stylized plants, evoking the historical sacking of Ansbach in 1430. The date '1430' is inscribed in the upper left corner, and a decorative text band in ornamental letterpress along the lower border reads 'DIE HUSSITEN'. |
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| Comments |
Ansbach's 1921 Notgeld issue was part of the vast wave of municipal emergency money that flooded Germany as federal coinage disappeared from circulation — hoarded, melted, or simply insufficient to meet daily transactional demand in the inflationary spiral following defeat in the First World War. Willy Flach's involvement is locally significant; he was an Ansbach-based artist, and his engagement reflects the broader Notgeld phenomenon of municipalities commissioning regional talent rather than commercial printing houses.
The 75 Pfennig denomination is slightly unusual — most series concentrated on rounder values, and its presence suggests the series was calibrated against specific local pricing needs rather than issued as a collectible set from the outset.