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| Issuer | Gemeinde Altaist (Municipality of Altaist) |
|---|---|
| Year | |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 10 Hellers (0.10) |
| Currency | Log in to see details |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
| Size | Log in to see details |
| Shape | Log in to see details |
| Printer | Log in to see details |
| Designer(s) | Log in to see details |
| Engraver(s) | Log in to see details |
| In circulation to | Log in to see details |
| Reference(s) | Log in to see details |
| Obverse description | Brown letterpress on cream paper, centred on a detailed rural Austrian village vignette within an ornate cartouche, signed by artist Karl Heyd at lower centre and illustrating a multi-storey farmhouse with outbuildings set beside a bridge and stream, with trees and hillside in the background. Denomination numeral '10' appears at upper left and upper right corners, with 'Heller' in decorative Gothic script along the lower border. A repeating dot-pattern rule frames the entire composition. |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | 10 10 Heller |
| Reverse description | Log in to see details |
| Reverse lettering | Log in to see details |
| Signature(s) | Log in to see details |
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| Comments |
Altaist is a small municipality in Upper Austria, and this note is a product of the Notgeld wave that swept Austrian and German communities after World War One, when small-denomination coinage disappeared from circulation almost entirely. Municipal authorities, businesses, and even individual villages printed their own emergency pfennig and heller issues to keep local commerce moving — thousands of distinct types were produced between roughly 1919 and 1922.
F. Kling of Linz was a regional commercial printer, not a specialist security firm, which is exactly what you'd expect for a village-level issue of this kind. Karl Heyd's design credit is unusually specific for Notgeld of this scale.