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The German Mark is the year 1923

2007-09-22 10:52:30 · 5 answers · asked by Starlene b 1 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

5 answers

Firstly, if it was a bill from the year 1923, the currency would be German "Reichsmark"...and well, as YOU probably know (some others apparently ignore that), 1923 was the year of hyperinflation... so a simple roll was like 50 million Reichsmark in the morning and probably 70 million in the evening...

But if you find someone naive enough to make that deal, tell me about it, I still have a 50 million Reichsmark bill and I d be willing to accept an exchange rate at hmm... let s say 1000RM to a dollar... I know, I m just too generous as the dollar is currently so low :-P

2007-09-23 23:41:19 · answer #1 · answered by Chris 4 · 1 0

German Deutsche Marks dated 1948 and later are still redeemable, and major currency exchanges still buy them in. Anything earlier is no longer valid.
Earlier notes have some value as collectibles.

2007-09-22 20:29:58 · answer #2 · answered by F. Frederick Skitty 7 · 0 0

You would have to sell it at a coin shop (where other old coins are sold). It is no longer an active currency for exchange.

2007-09-22 17:57:15 · answer #3 · answered by Alletery 6 · 1 1

Yes, as a collectors item, not as a currency. Germany is fully on the Euro.

2007-09-22 18:10:35 · answer #4 · answered by Uncle Pennybags 7 · 0 2

yes they do it at the airport i know

2007-09-22 17:55:58 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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