The 'Goldmark' (officially just ''Mark'') is the name used for the currency of the
German Empire from
1873 to
1914.
History
Before unification, the different German states issued a variety of different currencies, though most were linked to the
Vereinsthaler, a
silver coin containing 16⅔
grams of pure silver. Although the Mark was based on gold rather than silver, a fixed exchange rate between the Vereinsthaler and the Mark of 3 Mark = 1 Vereinsthaler was used for the conversion. Southern Germany had used the
Gulden as the standard unit of account, which was worth of a Vereinsthaler and, hence, became worth 1.71 (1) Mark in the new currency.
Bremen had used a gold based
Thaler which was converted directly to the Mark at a rate of 1 gold Thaler = 3.32 (3) Mark. Hamburg had used its own
Mark prior to 1873. This was replaced by the Goldmark at a rate of 1 Hamburg Mark = 1.2 Goldmark.
From
January 1 1876 onwards, the Mark became the only
legal tender. The name ''Goldmark'' was created later to distinguish it from the ''
Papiermark'' (paper mark) which suffered a massive loss of value through
hyperinflation following the
First World War. The Goldmark was on a gold standard with 2790 Mark equal to 1
kilogram of pure gold.
Coins

Goldmark coins (½, 1, 5 and 20 Mark)

Goldmark coins (½, 1, 5 and 20 Mark)
Coins of denominations between 1 Pfennig and 1 Mark were issued in standard designs for the whole Empire, whilst those above 1 Mark were issued by the individual states, using a standard design for the reverses (the ''Reichsadler'', the eagle insignia of the German Empire) with a design specific to the state on the obverse, generally a portrait of the monarch, with the free cities of
Bremen,
Hamburg and
Lübeck using their city insignia. Many of the smaller states issued coins in very small numbers and these are thus extremely rare and valuable. The principality of Lippe was the only state not to issue any gold coins in this period.
Base metal coins
★ 1 Pfennig (
Copper: 1873-1916, aluminium: 1916-1918)
★ 2 Pfennig (Copper: 1873-1916)
★ 5 Pfennig (
Cupro-nickel: 1873-1915, iron: 1915-1922)
★ 10 Pfennig (Cupro-nickel: 1873-1916,
iron and
zinc: 1915-1922)
★ 20 Pfennig (Cupro-nickel, 1887-1892)
★ 25 Pfennig (
Nickel, 1909-1912)
★ 50 Pfennig (
Aluminium, 1919-1922)
Silver coins
Silver coins were minted in .900 fineness to a standard of 5 grams silver per Mark. Production of 2 and 5 Mark coins ceased in 1915 while 1 Mark coins continued to be issued until 1916. A few 3 Mark coins was minted until 1918, and ½ Mark coins continued to be issued in silver until 1919.
★ 20 Pfennig, 1.1111 g (1 g silver), only until 1878
★ ½ Mark or 50 Pfennig, 2.7778 g (2.5 g silver)
★ 1 Mark, 5.5555 g (5 g silver)
★ 2 Mark, 11.1111 g (10 g silver)
★ 3 Mark, 16.6667 g (15 g silver), from 1908 onwards
★ 5 Mark, 27.7778 g (25 g silver)
The 3 Mark coin was introduced as a replacement for the
Vereinsthaler coins of the previous currency, whose silver content was slightly more than that of the 3 Mark coin.
Gold coins
Gold coins were minted in .900 fineness to a standard of 2790 Mark = 1 kilogram of gold. Gold coin production ceased in 1915.
★ 5 Mark, 1.9912 g (1.7921 g gold)
★ 10 Mark, 3.9825 g (3.5842 g gold)
★ 20 Mark, 7.965 g (7.1685 g gold)
Banknotes

100 Mark
Banknotes were issued by the Imperial Treasury (known as "Reichskassenschein") and the
Reichsbank, as well as by the banks of some of the states. Imperial Treasury notes were issued in denominations of 5, 10, 20 and 50 Mark, whilst Reichsbank notes were produced in denominations of 20, 50, 100 and 1000 Mark. The notes issued after 1914 are referred to as
Papiermark.
References
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External links