Vollständige Bilder anzeigen — kostenlose Registrierung
Mit Google fortfahren — kostenlos oder mit E-Mail registrieren

5 Mark Darlehenskassenschein

Emittent Reichsschuldenverwaltung
Jahr 1914
Typ Standard circulation banknote
Nennwert Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Währung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Material Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Größe Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Form Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Druckerei Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Designer Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Stecher Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Im Umlauf bis Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Referenz(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Vorderseitenbeschreibung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Vorderseitenlegende Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Rückseitenbeschreibung Blue letterpress print on a gray underprint incorporating fine microprint security text. The serial number appears in dark red at the lower left and upper right. Two circular seals of the Reichsschuldenverwaltung are placed near the lower centre, flanked at the lower left and right by two vignettes of crown-adorned Germania figures.
Rückseitenlegende Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Unterschrift(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Sicherheitsmerkmal Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Beschreibung der Sicherheitsmerkmale Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Varianten P#47a - 6 digit serial #
P#47b - 7 digit serial #
P#47c - 8 digit serial #
Anmerkungen

The Darlehenskassenscheine were emergency loan treasury notes, not Reichsbank issues — a legal distinction that mattered enormously in 1914. Germany's gold standard obligations made direct money-printing politically and legally fraught at the war's outbreak, so the government established Darlehenskassen (loan offices) that could issue notes against collateral, technically keeping them off the central bank's balance sheet. The fiction dissolved quickly, but the institutional separation was real enough at issue.

With just over twelve million printed, the 1914 5 Mark is among the more available of the wartime Darlehenskassenscheine — though paper quality on the series degrades noticeably with heavy use, and examples with intact microprint legibility are harder to find than the population figure suggests.