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obverse
reverse
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3 Marks (Gotthold Lessing) – Germany

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 200th anniversary of Gotthold Lessing
Germany
Context
Year: 1929
Issuer: Germany Issuer flag
Period:
(1918—1933)
Currency:
(1924—1948)
Demonetization: 1 October 1934
Total mintage: 400,800
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 15 g
Silver weight: 7.50 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 50% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard60
Numista: #15902
Value
Bullion value: $21.22

Obverse

Description:
Imperial eagle centered, surrounded by legend.
Inscription:
·DEUTSCHES REICH·

3 REICHSMARK
Translation:
GERMAN REICH

3 REICHSMARK
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Rudolf Bosselt

Reverse

Description:
Bust of Lessing, flanked by dates, name beneath.
Inscription:
1729 1929

GOTTH.EPHRAIM

LESSING

D
Script: Latin
Engraver: Rudolf Bosselt

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1929A216,760
1929D56,240
1929DProof
1929E29,800
1929EProof
1929F40,120
1929AProof
1929FProof
1929G24,400
1929GProof
1929J32,680
1929J800Proof

Historical background

By 1929, Germany's currency situation was one of fragile stability built upon foreign debt, a stark contrast to the hyperinflation that had destroyed the Reichsmark just six years earlier. The 1923 crisis had been ended by the introduction of the Rentenmark and then the new Reichsmark, backed by the Dawes Plan of 1924. This American-led initiative provided massive loans to Germany, stabilising the currency and allowing for economic recovery. However, this stability was fundamentally artificial; the German economy and its currency were now propped up by a continuous inflow of short-term American capital, used to pay war reparations and finance industrial expansion.

This dependency created a deeply vulnerable financial structure. The German state, municipalities, and corporations accumulated enormous debts denominated in foreign currencies. The economy appeared healthy on the surface, but it was a brittle prosperity. The Reichsbank's monetary policy was largely constrained by its obligation to maintain gold convertibility, and the entire system relied on the confidence of international investors to continually roll over short-term loans. Any disruption to this flow of capital would expose the underlying weakness.

Consequently, as 1929 progressed, the German currency situation became a ticking clock. The Young Plan, negotiated that year to reduce and reschedule reparations, did not address the core vulnerability: the mountain of volatile foreign debt. When the New York stock market crashed in October 1929, the source of Germany's loans abruptly dried up. Almost overnight, the stability of the Reichsmark was thrown into peril, setting the stage for a banking crisis, deflation, mass unemployment, and the eventual collapse of the Weimar Republic's financial system.
🌟 Uncommon