German ostmark
Ostmark (
German ostmark | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ostmark (German) ostmarka (Polish) idamark (Estonian) остмарка (Russian) | |||||
Denominations | |||||
Subunit | |||||
1/100 | pfennig (German) fenig, fenigów (Polish) feniņš (Latvian) | ||||
Plural | The language(s) of this currency belong(s) to the Slavic languages. There is more than one way to construct plural forms. | ||||
Symbol | ℳ | ||||
Banknotes | ½, 1, 2, 5, 20, 50, 100, 1000 ℳ | ||||
Demographics | |||||
Date of introduction | 4 April 1918 | ||||
Official user(s) | |||||
Unofficial user(s) | |||||
Issuance | |||||
Central bank | Darlehnskasse, Kowno | ||||
Circulated alongside German Ostruble, with 2 Ostmarken = 1 Ostruble |
Denominations
The denominations available were:
- ½ Mark;
- 1 Mark;
- 2 Mark;
- 5 Mark;
- 20 Mark;
- 50 Mark;
- 100 Mark;
- 1000 Mark.
The reverse sides of the Darlehnskassenscheine carry a warning against forging banknotes in German, Latvian and Lithuanian.
Aftermath
The Ostmark and Ostruble continued to circulate in Lithuania from the end of World War I until 1 October 1922, when they were replaced by the litas. The names skatikas and auksinas were used for Pfennig and Mark, for example, on postage stamps. The reason for the replacement was the link to the Papiermark, which already suffered from inflation (and would spiral into hyperinflation in 1923). The litas was pegged to the U.S. dollar.
Bibliography
- Gerhard Hahne, Die Inflation der Markwährungen und das postalische Geschehen im litauisch-polnischen Raum, Forschungsgemeinschaft Litauen im Bund Deutscher Philatelisten e.V., Uetze, (1996) (in German)
- N. Jakimovs and V. Marcilger, The Postal and Monetary History of Latvia 1918–1945, own book, 1991, pp. 14-13 - 14-15.