Catalog
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| Issuer | Gemeinde Hasloh (Municipality of Hasloh) |
|---|---|
| Year | |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 75 Pfennigs (75 Pfennige) (0.75) |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | NOTGELD DER GEMEINDE HASLOH COM. AMTSBEZIRK PINNEBERG DIESER SCHEIN VERLIERE SEINE GÜLTIGKEIT ZWEI WOCHEN NACH AUFRUF IM PINNEBERGER TAGEBLATT U. LOCKSTEDTER ANZEIGER Pf 75 Pf Der Finanzausschuss Der com. Amtsvorsteher KONRAD HANF · HAMBURG 8 |
| Reverse description | Dark letterpress-printed reverse with a bold diagonal lattice pattern of broad crossing bands covering the entire field, enclosing a central diamond-shaped vignette. Within the vignette, a silhouetted group of three standing figures is rendered in stark black against a lighter ground, accompanied by the denomination '75 Pf' in large stylised numerals at upper right. Below the vignette a rectangular text panel carries a five-line German literary quotation in Gothic script. |
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| Comments |
Hasloh is a small village in Schleswig-Holstein, and like hundreds of German municipalities it issued Notgeld during the hyperinflationary chaos of the early 1920s when the Reichsbank could not produce small-denomination coins and notes fast enough to meet demand. The Konrad Hanf printing house in Hamburg handled a considerable volume of this regional emergency scrip, servicing numerous northern German municipalities from a single operation.
The six-variant numbering in the DeNG reference (1-6/6) indicates a complete series of six different notes sharing this denomination — a common approach among municipalities looking to generate collector interest and maximize redemption revenue from hobbyists who would never present the notes for payment at all.