Catalog
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| Issuer | Germany (1871-1948) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1924 |
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| Shape | Round |
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| Obverse description | A spread-winged Imperial eagle displayed facing forward, head turned to the left, rendered in high relief against a smooth field. The eagle's talons are prominently detailed at the base of the design. The circular legend DEUTSCHES REICH arcs along the upper rim, the date 1924 runs vertically along the right side, and the denomination 5 MARK is inscribed across the lower field. The design is enclosed within a continuous beaded border. |
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| Obverse lettering | DEUTSCHES REICH 1924 5 MARK |
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| Additional information |
The 1924 Reichsmark series arrived during Germany's currency stabilization effort following the catastrophic hyperinflation that had rendered the Papiermark worthless by late 1923. The Rentenmark bridge had bought time; the Reichsmark, backed by the Dawes Plan framework, was meant to restore international confidence. Pattern pieces from this transitional moment reflect genuine uncertainty in Berlin about what the new coinage system would look like — multiple design proposals circulated simultaneously before final types were fixed.
The .500 fine standard adopted was a deliberate downgrade from pre-war silver content, a quiet acknowledgment that Germany could not yet afford the old purity.