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| 正面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | DEUTSCHE BUNDESBANK · BANKNOTE · EINHUNDERT DEUTSCHE MARK |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is centered on a vignette of a grand piano, set against an intaglio rendering of the Hoch'sche Konservatorium in Frankfurt am Main. A vibrating tuning fork is positioned in the lower right corner as an additional design element referencing the musical theme. The denomination inscription is rendered in bold letterpress against a multicolored guilloche underprint. |
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The P#41 100 Mark belongs to the BBk IIIa series — the last generation of Deutsche Mark notes before the Bundesbank began planning for euro convergence. Three signature combinations exist across the issue period, with the Tietmeyer/Gaddum pairing being the shortest-lived and consequently the least common in circulated grades. Schlesinger held the presidency across both of the earlier pairings, an unusual continuity that reflects the long transition period between Pöhl's abrupt resignation in 1991 — itself a protest against the terms of German monetary union — and Tietmeyer's formal appointment.
Pöhl's departure over the 1:1 East/West mark conversion rate gives the 02.01.1989-dated notes an ironic footnote: his signature appears on a note whose policy consequences he publicly repudiated.