Logo Title
Münzkabinett Berlin CC0
Context
Year: 1923
Issuer: Germany Issuer flag
Period:
(1918—1933)
Currency:
(1873—1923)
Demonetization: 15 November 1923
Total mintage: 282,614,352
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 1 g
Thickness: 1.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard35
Numista: #4688

Obverse

Description:
Heraldic eagle centered, lettering around beaded rim.
Inscription:
EINIGKEIT UND RECHT UND FREIHEIT *
Translation:
Unity and Justice and Freedom *
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Josef Wackerle

Reverse

Description:
Large central denomination, date, and mintmark. Lettering encircles the beaded rim.
Inscription:
DEUTSCHES REICH

200

MARK

1923

G
Translation:
German Empire

200

Mark

1923

G
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Josef Wackerle

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Animal> Bird> Eagle


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1923A174,900,023
1923AProof
1923D35,188,804
1923D1Proof
1923E11,250,000
1923FProof
1923G24,923,474
1923GProof
1923J16,258,000
1923JProof
1923E4,095Proof
1923F20,089,955

Historical background

The hyperinflation that ravaged Germany in 1923 was the catastrophic culmination of political and economic pressures following the First World War. The Weimar Republic, burdened by the colossal reparations demanded by the Treaty of Versailles, chose to finance its deficits not through taxes but by printing money. This practice began during the war itself but accelerated dramatically after 1921, as the government struggled to meet reparations payments and fund domestic spending, including the costly occupation of the Ruhr by French and Belgian troops in January 1923. With its industrial heartland paralyzed by a policy of passive resistance, the government printed ever more money to pay striking workers, flooding the economy with rapidly devaluing paper marks.

The result was an economic and social nightmare of unprecedented scale. Inflation spiraled into hyperinflation, with prices doubling not annually or monthly, but hourly. Currency became worthless, with people needing wheelbarrows full of banknotes to buy basic goods like bread or a newspaper. Savings, pensions, and life insurance were obliterated overnight, devastating the middle class and eroding social stability. Barter replaced cash transactions, and the very fabric of the economy unraveled as production stalled and speculation replaced productive work.

The crisis was finally halted in November 1923 with the introduction of the Rentenmark, a new currency backed by a theoretical mortgage on German land and industry. This bold act of psychological stabilization, led by Chancellor Gustav Stresemann and Finance Minister Hans Luther, restored confidence almost immediately. The period left deep scars, however, fostering widespread bitterness, political radicalization, and a profound distrust of democratic institutions, which extremist parties like the Nazis would later exploit to devastating effect.

Series: 1923 Germany circulation coins

1 Rentenpfennig obverse
1 Rentenpfennig reverse
1 Rentenpfennig
1923-1929
5 Rentenpfennig obverse
5 Rentenpfennig reverse
5 Rentenpfennig
1923-1925
10 Rentenpfennig obverse
10 Rentenpfennig reverse
10 Rentenpfennig
1923-1925
50 Rentenpfennig obverse
50 Rentenpfennig reverse
50 Rentenpfennig
1923-1924
200 Mark obverse
200 Mark reverse
200 Mark
1923
500 Mark obverse
500 Mark reverse
500 Mark
1923
2 Pfennigs obverse
2 Pfennigs reverse
2 Pfennigs
1923-1936
🌱 Very Common