Logo Title
obverse
reverse
smy77 CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Years: 1936–1939
Issuer: Germany Issuer flag
Period:
(1933—1945)
Currency:
(1924—1948)
Demonetization: 1 April 1949
Total mintage: 280,758,191
Material
Diameter: 21 mm
Weight: 4.03 g
Thickness: 1.75 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard92
Numista: #2341

Obverse

Description:
Eagle over swastika in wreath
Inscription:
Deutsches Reich 1939
Translation:
German Reich 1939
Language: German

Reverse

Description:
Face value above two oak leaves flanking the mintmark.
Inscription:
Reichspfennig

10

A

Edge

Milled


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1936A
1936E245,000
1936G128,503
1937A36,830,442
1937D6,882,000
1937E3,785,740
1937F5,934,490
1937G2,131,475
1937J4,439,429
1938A70,068,396
1938B7,852,083
1938D16,990,241
1938E10,738,700
1938F12,306,908
1938G8,583,983
1938J10,388,883
1939F6,993,039
1939A41,170,780
1939B7,813,867
1939D11,306,759
1939E5,078,600
1939G5,531,806
1939J5,557,067

Historical background

By 1936, Germany's currency situation was a tightly controlled paradox, superficially stable but built on unsustainable and militaristic foundations. The Nazi regime, having come to power in 1933, had eliminated the hyperinflation trauma of the 1920s through severe capital controls, wage and price freezes, and the suppression of independent economic data. The Reichsmark was not a freely convertible currency; its value on international markets was artificially maintained by government decree. Internally, this created an illusion of stability, but it masked a growing scarcity of consumer goods and a severe shortage of foreign exchange, which was desperately needed to purchase critical raw materials like oil, rubber, and high-grade iron ore for rearmament.

To circumvent the foreign currency crisis and fund its massive rearmament program in violation of the Treaty of Versailles, the regime implemented a complex system of financial instruments and bilateral barter agreements. The most notable tool was the Mefo bill, a form of promissory note used to finance armaments spending off the official budget and hidden from public view. Furthermore, Germany forced "clearing agreements" with trading partners in Southeastern Europe and Latin America, exchanging German industrial goods for raw materials without using hard currency. This allowed the Reich to import vital resources while conserving its dwindling gold and foreign currency reserves, effectively creating a separate, controlled economic sphere.

Consequently, the German public experienced a stable but constrained economic environment. While unemployment had fallen dramatically due to public works and conscription, and savings accounts held their nominal value, the reality was an economy on a war footing. Consumer goods were increasingly scarce or of ersatz (substitute) quality, as industrial capacity was wholly directed toward military production. The apparent stability of the Reichsmark was therefore a carefully managed façade, entirely dependent on state control, economic autarky, and the relentless prioritization of military expansion over civilian economic health, setting the stage for the economy's eventual collapse.

Series: 1936 Germany circulation coins

1 Pfennig obverse
1 Pfennig reverse
1 Pfennig
1936-1940
2 Pfennigs obverse
2 Pfennigs reverse
2 Pfennigs
1936-1940
5 Pfennigs obverse
5 Pfennigs reverse
5 Pfennigs
1936-1939
10 Pfennigs obverse
10 Pfennigs reverse
10 Pfennigs
1936-1939
2 Marks obverse
2 Marks reverse
2 Marks
1936-1939
5 Marks obverse
5 Marks reverse
5 Marks
1936-1939
🌱 Very Common