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75 Pfennig

Issuer Stadt Rheinsberg (City of Rheinsberg)
Year 1921
Type Local banknote
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Obverse description Central oval vignette with a view of Rheinsberg Palace set against an orange-tinted sky, framed by an elliptical cartouche bearing the title inscription. The denomination numeral '75' appears in large gothic script at both left and right, worked into elaborate baroque scroll-work and cloud motifs printed in pink and black. Below the vignette, two columns of text in Fraktur script carry the validity notice and official signatures, with a stamped serial number visible at the lower left.
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Reverse lettering 75 Pfennig
Pfennig 75
ROB. KOCH
Görlitzer Nachrichten und Anzeiger
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Comments

Rheinsberg's 1921 Notgeld series was designed by Rob. Koch — almost certainly Robert Koch of Berlin, who contributed artwork to several Brandenburg municipal emergency currency issues of the period, though the name was common enough that attribution requires caution. The series reference DeNG 1/2#1120.1 places this squarely within the catalogued Kleingeldscheine issues, the small-denomination paper substitutes that flooded German commerce as metal coinage disappeared from circulation during the inflationary spiral following World War I.

Rheinsberg itself was a modest Brandenburg town, better known historically for the Schloss where Frederick the Great spent his formative years before ascending the Prussian throne — a connection local Notgeld issuers occasionally exploited for decorative prestige.

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