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épinglages, plis, salissures, déchirures, trous, scotch au revers, coupures en marge
This 50-centime municipal bond was issued by the city of Saint-Quentin on 3 August 1914, at the very beginning of the First World War. This issue is rooted in a particular historical context: from the outbreak of the conflict, many French municipalities faced a shortage of fiduciary currency, as metal coins were being hoarded by the population. To address this lack of circulating currency, towns resorted to issuing municipal bonds designed to facilitate local commercial exchanges.
This emergency banknote, with a face value of 50 centimes, stands as a direct testimony to this period of economic and monetary turmoil that marked the beginning of the Great War. Saint-Quentin, a town in the department of Aisne, in northern France, was one of the first municipalities to react swiftly by producing this type of emergency paper money as early as August 1914.
This municipal bond belongs to the wider family of French emergency currencies, issued at the local level, and is today a highly sought-after collectible among numismatists specialising in First World War banknotes. The issue date, 03 August 1914, gives this document a particular historical significance, as it coincides precisely with the very first days of the world conflict ? France having officially declared war on Germany on 3 August 1914. This bond thus represents one of the very first concrete responses by French local authorities to the monetary disruption caused by the outbreak of hostilities.