Donation sounds good. This page lists a whole lot of those pieces http://www.notgeld.sewera.pl/index.php?co=berlin&l=de (item #9 and below), and it does say they were given to people who donated the amount. (The site is in Polish and German.) The value depends on the date of use or issue; in July 1922 for example, 30 M would buy you six eggs or three liters of milk ... Christian
thanks for that link also christian, i had run into the page before (it's great) and didn't think to google translate the top, looks like i guessed correct. top of page says" DONATE COINS of ASSOCIATIONS and CLUBS". .
This a favourite of my collection: A 10.000 Mark coin from the province of Westfalia in 1923. The diameter is 44mm and the weight 32g.
The highest denomination in that Westfalen series (those were not actually coins but rather used for fundraising) is the "1 Billion Mark" piece. For you that would be one trillion. Christian
that was one of those notgeld's I almost purchased for 20$ because I was still very new to the hobby. in fact it was almost to be amongst my first purchase ever, but I somehow decided against it and i'm very glad to not have fallen victim to such overpriced stuff. I found some selling for only 3$ months back. like this coin though!
Yes, that variety is pretty rare indeed. In printed texts (and on most coins), the "1" is a short sort-of-diagonal line on the left, then a long vertical line. The "7" is a short horizontal line at the top, then a long "diagonal" line. Now in hand-written notes, Americans for example reduce the "1" to a single vertical line to make the difference between the two digits more obvious. Germans for example add a horizontal line to the hand-written "7" for the same reason. But on a coin, that makes hardly any sense - and the engraver obviously made a mistake here ... Christian
The eagle design is basically the one that was used on all allied occupation coins - the regular ones (1 Pf, 5 Pf, 10 Pf 1945-48) as well as the 10 Pf 1947A with that extra line. The piece in post #255 looks odd to me. Apart from the weird mix of fonts, why would the country name appear twice? The last one (post #256) is a nazi medal issued in late 1933, I think. There are no coins with Hitler's portrait, but plenty of medals and donation "receipt" pieces. The four dates refer to "milestones" in the first year of Nazi Germany. Christian
NGC Certified Nazi Germany 1936 E Silver 5 Reichsmark with Rotational Die Error Shop for authentic antique german coins at www.PennyBridgeCoins.com