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1,000,000 mark note

1923/1923

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Banknotes for huge sums of money sound like a dream come true, but in reality they are often a symptom of economic nightmare. After the First World War (1914-18), Germany faced crippling demands for reparation payments to her former enemies. She also suffered severe economic depression. The early 1920s saw disastrous inflation, with ever-increasing issues of banknotes for denominations of up to a hundred billion marks. Soaring price rises meant that these apparently vast sums of money could buy less and less.Ordinary people found their savings and incomes reduced to nothing. Wages were collected in sacks, and shopkeepers used tea chests of notes instead of tills. In 1923, the year this one million mark note was issued by the Reichsbank, a letter in the British press reported that the price of a ham sandwich had gone up from 14,000 marks to 24,000 marks in one day. The price of a loaf of bread rose to 400 billion marks.

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  • Title: 1,000,000 mark note
  • Date Created: 1923/1923
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 186.000mm; Width: 80.000mm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Registration number: CIB.12433
  • Production place: Issued in Berlin
  • Material: paper
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Authority: Issuer Reichsbank
  • Acquisition: Donated by ifs School of Finance
British Museum

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