1935 5 Reichsmark

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Charles Ruge, Jun 4, 2022.

  1. Charles Ruge

    Charles Ruge Supporter! Supporter

    I was looking through a box of foreign coins I forgot about for 30 years or so and came upon this 1935 5 Reichsmark. The obverse has two swastikas and the German Eagle. The reverse has the Potsdam Church and the MM. It is 89.6% silver:

    DSCN0809 (2).JPG DSCN0810 (2).JPG
     
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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I own one. The church reverse is cool I think.
     
  4. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Think I have a couple of those somewhere. Surprisingly many religious leaders in Europe were tolerant of Nazism.
     
  5. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I have a couple of these and they have an interesting history. There are actually two variations of this coin...one with date and one without. This is the no date version. The date version has the date March 31, 1933, next to the church.

    The depiction of the church really had nothing to do with religion on these coins and more to do with tying the Nazi movement to previous German Imperialism.

    The Garrison Church in Potsdam also had strong ties to democratic elections. The first free elected Potsdam Magistrate was inaugurated there. As a result, there was a sentiment that using this location would give "free" credability to the Nazis.

    So, on March 21, 1933, the Nazi party conducted the opening ceremony for the new Reichstag Parliament at this location. This was the day the Third Reich was born. To tie it to the previous empire (the Second Reich)...the opening ceremony was on the same day as Kaiser Wilhelm I had opened his new Reichstag Parliament in 1871.
     
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  6. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Your '35 has the F mm for the Stuttgart mint. My '34 has the E shaped mm for the Muldenhutten mint. The ones with the date on the reverse had much smaller mintages and are worth a bit more across all grades. DSCN4181~2.JPG DSCN4183~2.JPG
     
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  7. whopper64

    whopper64 Well-Known Member

    Early on, it may have been the fact that the Nazis' were seemingly tolerant of the protestant and catholic churches, only "bad-mouthing" the Jews. Organized acts of violence against the Jews had not yet begun.
     
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  8. dlts

    dlts Well-Known Member

    I think that the obverse design looks evil.
     
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  9. Chris Winkler

    Chris Winkler Well-Known Member

    Here is a 50 Million Mark coin from 1923, the US Mint might soon be minting similar. Remember they were talking about a minting a trillion dollar platinum coin to cover the debt?

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  10. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    I like the version without the swastikas for sure. Here is a '36 5 mark with Von Hindenburg on the reverse. DSCN4175~2.JPG DSCN4174~2.JPG
     
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  11. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    Except this is a privately issued token, not a government issued coin.
     
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  12. Chris Winkler

    Chris Winkler Well-Known Member

    So that is a fantasy coin and not from 1923? Where can i find out more info?
     
  13. Chris Winkler

    Chris Winkler Well-Known Member

  14. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    They are German notgeld. Issued primarily by German towns, the low denominations were used as emergency money during the hyperinflation after WWI. There were also many that were issued specifically for collectors.

    IMG_20190805_112722_kindlephoto-339266705.jpg
     
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  15. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    I believe the high denomination Westphalen pieces were made for collectors. By 1923, the Value of the German mark was plummeting so quickly, workers would get paid at the end of the workday and immediately go to the store as it would be worth significantly less the next day.

    One of the big inconvenience was when the printers went on strike and there were delays in issuing higher denominations IMG_20190805_113056_burst_01_kindlephoto-212019283.jpg

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  16. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    It's what they called "Notgeld" which means "necessity money." Basically...the German equivalent to hard times tokens here in the US (but throw in hyperinflation). They were privately minted but intended for commerce.

    Some were collector issues though.
     
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  17. Seba79

    Seba79 Well-Known Member

  18. Rushmore

    Rushmore Coin Addict

    I have one. Can't take a picture because I'm out camping.
     
  19. Denis Richard

    Denis Richard Well-Known Member

    I'm wondering if anyone has a billion or trillion mark 1923 coin they would like photographed for free? I'd like to capture images of one for an upcoming book but I don't know anyone with one, and I can't seem to find one to buy online that isn't outrageously priced.
     
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