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Replies: 237 / Views: 28,574 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2477 Posts |
how cool. this'll be an interesting thread. I don't have any, but I think I know someone who does. he might have a zimbabwe note. i'll have to ask him. I'm sure he'll let me nab a pic.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6590 Posts |
1993 Yugoslavia 50,000,000,000 Dinars  
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Bedrock of the Community
United Kingdom
17965 Posts |
100 Trillion Dollars from Zimbabwe:  
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Bedrock of the Community
United Kingdom
17965 Posts |
Latin America has had some very bad inflation, The Inti in Peru was a very short-lived denomination. In 1985 One Inti was a cupro-nickel coin the size of a quarter. By 1990 there were no coins in circulation and the lowest value note was 10,000 Intis. The highest value Inti note before the currency was replaced by the New Sol was 5 Million Intis:  
Edited by NumisRob 06/17/2026 04:23 am
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Moderator
 United States
189117 Posts |
Nice examples!  I merged this new topic into the existing one that went dormant. 
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2578 Posts |
Quote: Nice examples!
I merged this new topic into the existing one that went dormant.  & Thanks for bumping @jbuck!  It reminded me that I picked up this 100,000 Lira P-100b:  
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Moderator
 United States
189117 Posts |
Quote: Thanks for bumping @jbuck! My pleasure.  Quote: It reminded me that I picked up this 100,000 Lira P-100b: Very nice! 
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Valued Member
United States
167 Posts |
Nice examples of hyperinflation notes, I especially like the 100 trillion Zimbabwe note. 
Edited by Empty_Pockets 06/18/2026 4:45 pm
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Valued Member
United States
167 Posts |
Thank you jbuck for merging the threads 
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Moderator
 United States
189117 Posts |
My pleasure. 
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Valued Member
United States
167 Posts |
Germany hyperinflation occurred from 1922-1923. What caused hyperinflation is that Germany had to pay reparations to the countries involved in the WWI conflict, specifically France. When Germany couldn't make the payments, France occupied the southern German coal fields. France would take the coal instead of German money. Germany responded by printing massive amounts of paper money in order to pay reparations. The problem with this was hyperinflation. Small municipalities began to print notgelds between 1914-19 during WWI. These notgelds replaced the mark because it became increasingly difficult to get marks from the Weimar Republic. Germany had no gold or other assets to back the mark, Germany instead printed more marks that became worthless resulting in hyperinflation. To combat hyperinflation, Germany created a new mark, the Rentenmark. The Rentenmark was backed by land and industrial assets instead of gold. After the Rentenmark, it was replaced with the Reichsmark. Germany took out loans to buy gold thereby backing the new mark, the Reichmark. This mark is what you see up to the end of WWII. Below are examples of the Rentenmark and the notgeld. The Rentenmark: 1937 Germany 2 Rentenmark 125x70mm P-174b   The notgeld, Bad Kreuznach. 1917-18 Germany 50 pfennig 100x71mm N-207917  
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2477 Posts |
Quote: I merged this new topic into the existing one that went dormant. thank you, jbuck. had me a bit confused at first, but I caught on. maybe I'm not as slow as I think I am. very interesting pieces of history.
Edited by MrPink2018 06/18/2026 11:46 pm
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Valued Member
United States
167 Posts |
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Moderator
 United States
189117 Posts |
Nice examples! 
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Moderator
 United States
189117 Posts |
Quote: thank you, jbuck. had me a bit confused at first, but I caught on. maybe I'm not as slow as I think I am. This topic's evolution is a bit different than most. 
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Replies: 237 / Views: 28,574 |
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