Weimar Germany Reichsbanknote, ten million mark

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn521553-irn524935 an entity of type: Record

The currency was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2003 by Joel Forman. 
1923 August 22-1923 November 16, 1923 August 22 
irn524935 
Weimar Germany Reichsbanknote, ten million mark 
overall: Height: 3.125 inches (7.938 cm) | Width: 4.875 inches (12.383 cm) 
Reichsbank note, valued at 10 million marks, distributed in Germany from August to November 1923. German efforts to finance World War I sent the nation into debt. Following their defeat, the Treaty of Versailles obligated Germany to pay reparations to several countries, which increased the nation’s financial struggles. The German government attempted to solve this problem by printing more money, which led to severe inflation. The inflation grew to critical levels between 1922 and1923, when the exchange rate of the mark to the United States dollar went from 2,000 marks per dollar to well over a million in a matter of months. The government printed higher and higher denominations, but was unable to keep up with the plunging rates. Germans began using the worthless bills as kindling, wallpaper, and children’s crafts. The emerging National Socialist German Worker’s (Nazi) Party frequently used the bills to their advantage, writing anti-Semitic messages on them, which blamed Jews for Germany’s financial problems. In order to stabilize the economy, the German government established the Rentenbank. The new Minister of Finance, Hans Luther, created the Rentenmark, which was backed by mortgages on all real property in Germany, rather than gold. The Rentenmark was valued at 4.2 marks to one U.S. dollar, and its introduction on November 16, 1923, successfully ended the inflation crisis. Despite this, the Nazi Party continued to use people’s residual economic fears as a propaganda tool to gain power, eventually leading to Adolf Hitler becoming Chancellor in 1933. 
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Reichsbanknote printed in black ink on lightweight, rectangular, cream-colored paper with a geometric star-patterned watermark. On the face, there is a rectangle with a light green, geometric, herringbone-patterned backprint that deepens into a dark green streak down the center. The denomination is printed in decorative font across the center as part of the backprint. Black German text is printed across the center in fraktur-style font, and in three, vertically-aligned lines on the left. There are 12 signatures centered at the bottom and flanked by the Reichsbankdirektorium seal bearing a left-facing Reichsadler surrounded by German text, on both sides. The serial number is printed in red ink on the upper right. The note has creasing in the lower left corner, a small tear at center top border, and slight staining across the blank back. 

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