The Danzig gulden was the currency of the Free City of Danzig (present-day Gdańsk, Poland) between 1923 and 1939. Inflation in Danzig during 1922 had spiralled out of control, and the city abandoned the German Papiermark in favour of the Danzig gulden the following year. The issuance of the new gulden was overseen by the Bank of Danzig, established in early 1924. The obverse of each note shows the city's coat of arms on the left and an important local architectural structure in the centre. This one-hundred-gulden specimen banknote, issued in 1931, bears an illustration of a dock scene beside the river Motława in the city centre on the obverse.
Other denominations:
Banknote design credit: Bank of Danzig; photographed by Andrew Shiva