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50 Deutsche Mark

Issuer Deutsche Notenbank
Year 1955
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Value 50 Mark (50 DDM)
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Obverse description Printed in dark brown and ochre on a cream ground, the obverse is framed by an elaborate guilloche border enclosing the central field, where the ornamental inscription 'FÜNFZIG DEUTSCHE MARK' is set in decorative letterpress script at left-centre and a large lathe-work rosette carries the intaglio numeral '50' to the right. A cartouche at the top centre bears 'BANKNOTE', with the issuing authority text and place-date 'BERLIN 1955' in the lower centre, while a secondary guilloche medallion with the numeral '50' is positioned at the lower left outside the principal border. The two-letter prefix serial number is rendered in red.
Obverse lettering 50 BANKNOTE 50 FÜNFZIG DEUTSCHE MARK VON DER DEUTSCHEN NOTENBANK AUF GRUND IHRER SATZUNG AUSGEGEBEN BERLIN 1955 50 50 50
(Translation: Banknote Fifty German Mark Issued by the Deutsche Notenbank Based on its Statutes Berlin 1955)
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The Deutsche Notenbank was the central bank of the German Democratic Republic, and this 1955 50-Mark note was issued into an economy operating under rigid Soviet-aligned monetary controls — not to be confused with the West German Deutsche Bundesbank series of the same period. The two German states ran parallel currency systems with near-identical names and denominations, a situation that created persistent confusion and enabled ongoing black-market arbitrage across the inner-German border.

Printed by the Staatsdruckerei Berlin, the GDR's state printing works, the series relied on a watermark as its primary security feature — modest by Western standards of the time. The 1957 currency reform would eventually pull this denomination from circulation.

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