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75 Pfennig

Issuer Kreissparkasse Diepholz
Year 1921
Type Local banknote
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Reverse description The reverse presents an oval vignette set against a dark decorative border with a diamond-pattern frame, printed in black and pale rose tones. Within the oval, a humorous rural scene shows a farmer clinging to the back of a running pig in a comic struggle, executed in a loose illustrative style typical of German Notgeld artistry. A two-line verse in Gothic script appears above and below the central scene, and the denomination '75' is repeated in each corner; the printer's imprint 'Casten & Suhling, Bremen.' appears at the lower right outside the oval.
Reverse lettering Denn so ein Schwein das steckt so recht Voll Trotz und Eigensinn.
Wohin man's gerne haben möcht Da wills durchaus nicht hin.
Casten & Suhling, Bremen.
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Comments

Kreissparkasse Diepholz was one of hundreds of German district savings banks that stepped into the currency vacuum created by the postwar coin shortage — the so-called Kleingeldnot — by issuing Notgeld in fractional pfennig denominations. The 75 Pfennig value is a slightly unusual choice; most issuers favored rounder figures, and its presence in the series suggests the Diepholz series was designed to cover precise change requirements in local commerce.

Casten & Suhling of Bremen were a regional commercial printer, not a specialist banknote firm, which is entirely typical of the Notgeld phenomenon — and occasionally shows in the printing registration.

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