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obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions

3 Marks (Dinkelsbühl) – Germany

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 1000th Anniversary - Founding of Dinkelsbühl
Germany
Context
Year: 1928
Issuer: Germany Issuer flag
Period:
(1918—1933)
Currency:
(1924—1948)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 40,000
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 15 g
Silver weight: 7.50 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 50% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard59
Numista: #29889
Value
Bullion value: $21.32

Obverse

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

*DREI REICHSMARK*
Translation:
GERMAN REICH

*THREE REICHSMARK*
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Karl Roth

Reverse

Description:
Dinkelsbühl depicted with a central farm worker, encircled by legend.
Inscription:
TAUSEND·JAHRE·DINKELSBÜHL

1 9 2 8

·D·
Translation:
THOUSAND YEARS OF DINKELSBÜHL

1928

D
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Joseph Wackerle

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1928D40,000
1928DProof

Historical background

By 1928, Germany appeared to be a model of Weimar stability and economic resurgence. The hyperinflation crisis of 1923 had been decisively ended by the introduction of the Rentenmark, later solidified as the Reichsmark, under the leadership of Hjalmar Schacht at the Reichsbank. This new currency was backed by the Dawes Plan of 1924, which restructured reparations and provided substantial American loans. Foreign capital, particularly from the United States, flooded into German industry and municipalities, fueling a period of renewed growth, cultural flourishing, and political calm known as the "Golden Twenties."

However, this stability was profoundly fragile and built on precarious international dependencies. The German economy was effectively functioning on borrowed time and foreign money, with short-term American loans constantly needed to service long-term reparation debts and fund domestic spending. The Reichsbank maintained a restrictive monetary policy to defend the new currency's value, but this contributed to underlying structural weaknesses, including high unemployment and agricultural distress. The prosperity was uneven and superficial, masking a dangerous reliance on the continued flow of Wall Street credit.

Consequently, the currency situation in 1928 was a calm before the storm. The Reichsmark was stable, but the entire financial structure was acutely vulnerable to any shock in the global credit system. When the New York Stock Exchange crashed in 1929, the cascade effect was immediate and catastrophic for Germany. American loans were recalled, the capital inflow reversed, and the Reichsmark came under severe pressure, leading within three years to banking collapses, deflation, mass unemployment, and the political collapse that brought the Nazi Party to power. The solidity of 1928 was thus an illusion, predicated on an unsustainable and externally financed equilibrium.
💎 Very Rare