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| 正面描述 | The left half of the note is occupied by a letterpress vignette, signed 'H. Kusler', illustrating a rural Austrian farmstead with thatched roofing, a large deciduous tree, and a decorative window shutter rendered in a fine illustrative style. To the right, the denomination '10' appears in bold numerals at upper left and upper right flanking the legend 'Zehn Heller', beneath which the text 'Gutschein der Gemeinde' leads to the large issuer name 'Eizendorf' in bold blackletter type. The validity clause 'Giltig bis 31. Mai 1921.' is printed below, accompanied by a manuscript Bürgermeister signature line, all enclosed within an ornamental dot-and-scroll border running the full perimeter of the note. |
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| 正面铭文 | 10 Zehn Heller 10 Gutschein der Gemeinde Eizendorf Giltig bis 31. Mai 1921. Bürgermeister |
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An Austrian Notgeld issue, almost certainly from the post-WWI period when municipal and local authorities across the former Habsburg lands printed their own emergency small-denomination currency to address a catastrophic coin shortage. The central government in Vienna could not produce enough low-value coinage to meet everyday transactional demand, so thousands of Gemeinden printed their own — Eizendorf among them. The Hierl press in Brkin handled production, a local arrangement typical of the region's self-contained printing economy.
Kusler's design work on a 10 Heller note would have been modest in scope by necessity. These hyper-local Notgeld issues often survive in quantity because collectors hoarded them from the start.