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| 正面描述 | Printed in dark brownish-red on cream paper, the obverse is dominated by a central oval vignette enclosed within a wreath of laurel branches tied with decorative ribbon scrolls at the base, showing a woodcutter or sawmill worker operating a large horizontal log-cutting apparatus amid timber and forest debris. The denomination '80 HELLER' appears in bold numerals within solid corner cartouches at upper left and upper right. Above the vignette, the issuer inscription 'NOTGELD DER GEMEINDE' arches across the top, with 'PICHL' set in a prominent framed panel and 'BEI WINDISCHGARSTEN' in smaller type immediately below. |
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| 背面描述 | The reverse is printed in the same dark brownish-red on cream paper and carries the full legal text of the emergency currency obligation within a decorative border composed of geometric and floral guilloche panels and ornamental spiral corner devices. Vertical side panels repeat the issuer name in abbreviated stacked form. The date of issue, municipality guarantee clause, and redemption deadline are set in letterpress typeface across the central field. The designer and printer credits appear in small type at the lower left and lower right margins respectively. |
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One of the thousands of Austrian municipal Notgeld issues produced in the immediate postwar period, when the collapse of the Habsburg economy left local governments printing their own fractional currency out of practical necessity. Pichl bei Windischgarsten is a small alpine parish in Upper Austria — not a place you'd expect to find a named designer, but Weeser-Krell contributed to several regional Notgeld series during this period.
The Linz firm Jos. Feichtingers Erben handled a large volume of Upper Austrian municipal issues in 1920. Michael Mayr, one of the signatories here, was at the time serving as Federal Chancellor of Austria — an unusual detail for what is essentially a village emergency note.