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10 Korona

Issuer Magyar Postatakarékpénztár (Hungarian Postal Savings Bank)
Year 1919
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Size 142 × 88 mm
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Obverse lettering A MAGYAR POSTATAKARÉKPÉNZTÁR
BÁRKI KÍVÁNSÁGÁRA E PÉNZJEGYET
TIZ KORONA
ÉRTÉKBEN ÁTVÁLJA MÁS
TÖRVÉNYES PÉNZNEMEKRE
BUDAPEST 1919 JULIUS 15.
MAGYAR POSTATAKARÉKPÉNZTÁR
ELLENŐR FŐFELÜGYELŐ FŐPÉNZTÁROS
E PÉNZJEGY UTÁNZÁSA TÖRVÉNY SZERINT BÜNTETTETIK
Reverse description The reverse is laid out as a symmetrical typographic composition in blue-green tones, with the large numeral 10 at centre within an oval guilloche frame flanked by two rosette medallions. Corner pieces each carry the digit 10, and the denomination legend TIZ KORONA is repeated four times along the borders, interspersed with foliate ornaments. The overall design relies entirely on geometric and floral letterpress ornaments without pictorial vignettes.
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Comments

The Magyar Postatakarékpénztár was pressed into currency issuance during the chaotic interregnum of 1919, when Hungary was cycling through governments — the collapse of the Habsburg state, Mihály Károlyi's short-lived republic, and then Béla Kun's Hungarian Soviet Republic in quick succession. These postal savings notes were emergency instruments, produced domestically in Budapest rather than through the established Austro-Hungarian note-printing apparatus in Vienna, which had ceased to function as a unified institution.

The series circulated under more than one political authority, which complicates any clean attribution to a single issuing regime. Overprinting and revalidation stamps appear on some examples as successive governments attempted to control which paper remained legal tender.

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