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Only the denominations DM 1 ⁄ 2, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 were instituted on the initial date of June 20, 1948. The currency reform of 1948 went into effect on June 20, 1948, in the Trizone, the three western occupation zones of Germany. From June 21, 1948, the Deutsche Mark ("DM", also "D-Mark") was the sole legal tender there.
Main menu. Main menu. ... 1948 (West Germany) 2002 East German mark East Germany: 1948 1990 Saar franc: Saarland: 1947 1959 Saar mark: Saarland: 1947 1947 Reichsmark
C-5As from Rhein-Main AB being offloaded in the Middle East during Operation Desert Shield. U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster IIIs and C-141 Starlifters are parked on the ramp at Rhein-Main Air Base, Germany, on 26 December 1995. The aircraft were used to deploy troops and equipment for the NATO Implementation Force (IFOR) in Bosnia and ...
According to U.S. Currency Auctions, it was an 1890 $2 bill that is worth — not sold for — $4,500. You'd have to find a buyer willing to pay that, and it would have to also be in uncirculated ...
Fourteen African countries use the franc CFA (in west Africa, Communauté financière africaine; in equatorial Africa, Coopération financière en Afrique centrale), originally (1945) worth 1.7 French francs and then from 1948, 2 francs (from 1960: 0.02 new franc) but after January 1994 worth only 0.01 French franc. Therefore, from January 1999 ...
But in November 1947, the French government reintroduced the French franc as the official currency. Between 20 November 1947 and 15 January 1948, all notes and coins had to be exchanged at a rate of 20 Saar marks = 1 franc. In 1954 the government of the Protectorate issued new coins in denominations of 10, 20, 50 and 100 francs. [2]
Rhein-Main may refer to: Frankfurt Rhine-Main, a metropolitan area in central Germany; Rhein-Main Air Base, a former U.S. air base;
[5]: 173 ERP dollars were used to acquire raw material and machinery imports, which were sold in France for francs. These francs or “counterpart funds,” were allocated by the French government to the Plan. [5]: 172–173 In 1949 and 1950, between 50% and 90% of the Monnet Plan’s resources came from counterpart funds.