German Papiermark


The name Papiermark is applied to the German currency from 4 August 1914 when the link between the Goldmark and gold was abandoned, due to the outbreak of World War I. In particular, the name is used for the banknotes issued during the hyperinflation in Germany of 1922 and especially 1923.

History

From 1914, the value of the Mark fell. The rate of inflation rose following the end of World War I and reached its highest point in October 1923. The currency was stabilized in November 1923 after the announcement of the creation of the Rentenmark, although the Rentenmark did not come into circulation until 1924. When it did, it replaced the Papiermark at the rate of 1 trillion Papiermark = 1 Rentenmark. Later in 1924, the Rentenmark was replaced by the Reichsmark.
In addition to the issues of the government, emergency issues of both tokens and paper money, known as Kriegsgeld and Notgeld, were produced by local authorities.
The Papiermark was also used in the Free City of Danzig until replaced by the Danzig Gulden in late 1923. Several coins and emergency issues in papiermark were issued by the free city.

Coins

During the war, cheaper metals were introduced for coins, including aluminium, zinc and iron, although silver ½ Mark pieces continued in production until 1919. Aluminium 1 Pfennig were produced until 1918 and the 2 Pfennig until 1916. Whilst iron 5 Pfennig, both iron and zinc 10 Pfennig and aluminium 50 Pfennig coins were issued until 1922. Aluminium 3 Mark were issued in 1922 and 1923, and aluminium 200 and 500 Mark were issued in 1923. The quality of many of these coins varied from decent to poor.
During this period, many provinces and cities also had their own corresponding coin and note issues, referred to as Notgeld currency. This came about often due to a shortage of exchangeable tender in one region or another during the war and hyperinflation periods. Some of the most memorable of these to be issued during this period came from Westfalen and featured the highest face value denominations on a coin ever, eventually reaching 1,000,000,000,000 Mark .

Banknotes

First World War issues

In 1914, the State Loan Office began issuing paper money known as Darlehnskassenscheine. These circulated alongside the issues of the Reichsbank. Most were 1- and 2-Mark notes but there were also 5-, 20-, 50- and 100-Mark notes.

Post War issues

The victor nations in World War I decided to assess Germany for their costs of conducting the war against Germany. With no means of paying in gold or currency backed by reserves, Germany ran the presses, causing the value of the Mark to collapse.
Between 1914 and the end of 1923 the German papiermark’s rate of exchange against the U.S. dollar plummeted from 4.2 mark/dollar to 4.2 trillion mark/dollar. The price of one gold mark in German paper currency at the end of 1918 was two paper mark, but by the end of 1919 a gold mark cost 10 paper mark. This inflation worsened between 1920 and 1922, and the cost of a gold mark rose from 15 to 1,282 paper mark. In 1923 the value of the paper mark had its worst decline. By July, the cost of a gold mark had risen to 101,112 paper mark, and in September was already at 13 million. On 30 Nov 1923 it cost 1 trillion paper mark to buy a single gold mark.
In October 1923, Germany experienced a 29,500% hyperinflation. Historically, this one-month inflation rate has only been exceeded three times: Yugoslavia, 313,000,000% ; Zimbabwe, 79.6 billion% ; and Hungary, 41.9 quadrillion%.
On 15 November 1923 the papiermark was replaced by the rentenmark at 4.2 rentenmark/dollar, or 1 trillion papiermark/rentenmark.
During the hyperinflation, ever higher denominations of banknotes were issued by the Reichsbank and other institutions. The Papiermark was produced and circulated in enormously large quantities. Before the war, the highest denomination was 1000-Mark, equivalent to approximately 50 British pounds or 238 US dollars. In early 1922, 10,000-Mark notes were introduced, followed by 100,000- and 1 million-Mark notes in February 1923. July 1923 saw notes up to 50 million-Mark, with 10 milliard -Mark notes introduced in September. The hyperinflation peaked in October 1923 and banknote denominations rose to 100 trillion -Mark. At the end of the hyperinflation, these notes were worth approximately £5 sterling or US$24.

Denomination Translations

There is a confusion that frequently arises when translating German to English with regard to denominations, as the exact same words, in some cases, exist in both languages but represent different denominations, as is the case with the word "Billion". So to alleviate that confusion, a simple chart of translations.
GERMANENGLISH
Million / MillionenMillion / Million
Millard / MilliardenBillion / Billions
Billion / BillionenTrillion / Trillions

Weimar Republic (1920–24)

YearIssueValueDateImageComments
1920
10
1920
50
1920
100Portraits based on the :File:Bamberger Reiter BW 2.JPG|Bamberg riders at Bamberg Cathedral
1922
10,000Portrait of a young Man by Albrecht Dürer
1922
500:File:Jakob Meyer zum Pfeil.jpg|Jakob Meyer of the Meyer zum Pfeil family
1922
500
1922
100
1922
1,000
1922
5,000Section of Portrait of a Man with a Coin by Hans Memling
1922
5,000Portrait of Hans Urmiller based on Portrait of Hans Urmiller and his Son by Barthel Beham
1922
50,000Bürgermeister Arnold von Brauweiler based on Burgomaster Arnold von Brauweiler by Barthel Bruyn the Elder
1922
5,000Merchant Imhof based on Portrait of a Man by Albrecht Dürer
1922
1,000Portrait of Jörg Herz based on :File:Jörg Herz Nürnberger Münzmeister painting.jpg| Jörg Herz Nürnberger Münzmeister by Georg Pencz
1923
100,000Merchant Georg Giese based on Portrait of Georg Giese by Hans Holbein the Younger
1923
10,000Not issued
1923
20,000
1923
1million
1923
5,000Portrait of Hans Urmiller based on Portrait of Hans Urmiller and his Son by Barthel Beham
1923
500,000
1923
2millionMerchant Georg Giese based on Portrait of Georg Giese by Hans Holbein the Younger
1923
5million
1923
100,000
1923
500,000
1923
1million
1923
1million
1923
5million
1923
10million
1923
20million
1923
50million
1923
50,000
1923
200,000
1923
1million
1923
2million
1923
5million
1923
10million
1923
100million
1923
20million
1923
50million
1923
500million
1923
500billionSpecimen only
1923
1trillionSpecimen only
1923
1billionOverprinted on 15 Dec 1922 note
1923
1billion
1923
5billion
1923
10billion
1923
10billion
1923
20billion
1923
50billion
1923
200billion
1923
1billion
1923
5billion
1923
500billionOverprinted on 15 Mar 1923 note
Portrait of Hans Urmiller based on Portrait of Hans Urmiller and his Son by Barthel Beham
1923
50billion
1923
100billion
1923
500billion
1923
100billion
1923
1trillion
1923
5trillion
1923
10trillion
1923
10trillion
1923
100billion
1923
1trillion
1923
2trillion
1923
5trillion
1924
10trillion
1924
20trillionPortrait of a woman based on Portrait of a young Venetian woman by Albrecht Dürer
1924
50trillionJakob Muffel based on Portrait of Jakob Muffel by Albrecht Dürer
1924
100trillionPortrait of Willibald Pirckheimer based on a painting by Albrecht Dürer
1924
5trillion

Danzig

The Danziger Privat Actien-Bank was the first bank established in Danzig. They issued two series of notes denominated in thalers prior to issuing the mark. These mark issues are extremely rare. The opened 16 March 1857, and by 1911 two additional banks were in operation.

Issuance of the Danzig papiermark

The German papiermark was issued by Danzig from 1914 to 1923. Five series were issued during World War I by the City Council. Denominations ranged from 10 pfennig to 20 mark. The Free City of Danzig municipal senate issued an additional four post-World War I series of notes. The 1922 issue was denominated in 100, 500, and 1000 mark notes. The denominations for the 1923 issue were 1000, and 10000 and 50000 mark notes. The 1923 provisional issue reused earlier notes with a large red stamp indicating the new denominations of 1 million and 5 million mark. The last series of Danzig mark was the 1923 inflation issue of 1 million, 10 million, 100 million, 500 million, and 5 billion mark notes. The Danzig mark was replaced by the Danzig gulden, first issued by the Danzig Central Finance Department on 22 October 1923.
IssueValueImage
1914 Emergency
50 Pfennig
1914 Emergency
1 Mark
1914 Emergency
2 Mark
1914 Emergency
3 Mark
1916
10 Pfennig
1916
50 Pfennig
1918 First
5 Mark
1918 First
20 Mark
1918 Second
50 Pfennig
1918 Second
20 Mark
1919
50 Pfennig
1922
100
1922
500
1922
1,000
1923 First
1,000
1923 First
10,000
1923 First
50,000
1923 Provisional
1million
1923 Provisional
5million
1923 Inflation
1million
1923 Inflation
10million
1923 Inflation
100million
1923 Inflation
500million
1923 Inflation
5billion
1923 Inflation
10billion

Note on numeration

In German, Milliarde is 1,000,000,000, or one thousand million, while Billion is 1,000,000,000,000, or one million million.

Citations