:''This article is about the archaic weight of measure/currency. For other uses of ''mark'', see the disambiguation page ''
Mark''.''

1923 50 Million Mark worth approximately $12 million (US-1923) 9 years earlier, but only $1US when printed. Worthless a few weeks later.
'Mark' (from a merging of three
Teutonic/
Germanic languages words,
Latinized in 9th century post-classical Latin as ''marca, marcha, marha, marcus'')
[1] was a measure of weight (
Mark (weight)) only for gold and silver, commonly used throughout
western Europe and equivalent to 8 oz. Considerable variations, however, occurred throughout the
Middle Ages (see
du Cange, ''Gloss. med. et infim. Lat.'', s.v. ''
Marca'' for a full list).
In
England the "mark" never appeared as a coin, but as a money of account only, and apparently came into use in the 10th century through the
Danes. It first equalled 100
pence, but after the
Norman Conquest equalled 160 pence = 2/3 of the
Pound Sterling, or 13 shillings and 4 pence. In
Scotland, the
Merk Scots comprised a silver coin of this value, issued first in 1570 and afterwards in
1663.
In northern
Germany (especially
Hamburg) and
Scandinavia, the Mark was a unit of account and coin worth 16
schilling or
skilling.
Germany adopted the Mark as its currency following unification in 1871. This first Mark came to be known as the
Goldmark, which became
Papiermark later and eventually suffered
hyperinflation in 1923. The most valuable Mark were printed in 1908, today they would be worth up $55 million U.S. a piece. A new Mark was introduced, called the
Rentenmark (worth 1,000,000,000,000 Papiermark), swiftly replaced by the
Reichsmark in 1924.
The
German Mark was introduced by the western allies in their zones of occupation in 1948, with the Soviets issuing their own Deutsche Mark (often referred to as the
East German Mark or Ostmark, later officially called the "Mark der DDR") later that same year.
Modern usage
"Mark" can refer to the following currencies:
★ In Germany:
★
★ 1873 - 1914
German Goldmark, the currency of the German Empire
★
★ 1914 - 1923
German Papiermark
★
★ 1923 - 1924
German Rentenmark
★
★ 1924 - 1948
German Reichsmark
★
★ 1948 - 1990
East German Mark or ''Ostmark'', the currency of the German Democratic Republic
★
★ 1948 - 2001
German Mark or ''Deutsche Mark (D-Mark, DM)'', the currency of (West) Germany
★ In other countries:
★
★
Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark, the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
★
★
Estonian mark, the currency of Estonia until 1927
★
★
Finnish mark or markka, the currency of Finland from 1860 until 2001
★
★
Polish marka
See also
★
Mark (weight)
★
Mark (unit)
★
British coinage
★
Markland
References
★
Notes
1. OED, DRAFT REVISION June 2002