One of the thousands of Austrian municipal Notgeld issues printed during the economic collapse that followed the First World War, this 80 Heller note from Pichl bei Windischgarsten was a direct response to chronic small-change shortages as the old Habsburg monetary infrastructure disintegrated. The denomination itself — 80 Heller — is oddly specific, a quirk common in Austrian Notgeld where issuers calculated exact change requirements rather than rounding to convenient values.
The cosignature of Michael Mayr is worth noting: he served as Austrian Federal Chancellor from 1920 to 1921, and his appearance here in a local municipal capacity reflects the overlapping civic roles common in small Upper Austrian communities at the time.
One of the thousands of Austrian municipal Notgeld issues printed during the economic collapse that followed the First World War, this 80 Heller note from Pichl bei Windischgarsten was a direct response to chronic small-change shortages as the old Habsburg monetary infrastructure disintegrated. The denomination itself — 80 Heller — is oddly specific, a quirk common in Austrian Notgeld where issuers calculated exact change requirements rather than rounding to convenient values.
The cosignature of Michael Mayr is worth noting: he served as Austrian Federal Chancellor from 1920 to 1921, and his appearance here in a local municipal capacity reflects the overlapping civic roles common in small Upper Austrian communities at the time.