Catalog
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| 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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| Comments |
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.