• Here we shall place everything else that didn't quite fit into the other categories. Things like books, booklets, tinnies (day badges), newspapers, etcetera.


    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - 10 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - back.]

    [Below: 1937 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - 20 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1937 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - back.]

    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - 50 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - back.]

    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - 100 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1933 -Ehestandsdarlehen (marriage loan) - back.]

    [Below: 1936 treasury bond - 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: 1936 treasury bond - back.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond (coupons) - 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Back of 1938 treasury bond - 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1936 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: 1936 treasury bond - back.]

    [Below: 1937 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: 1937 treasury bond - back.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond (coupons) - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Back of 1938 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1940 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Back of 1940 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1941 treasury bond - 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - 5,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - payment slips.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - 100,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: 1938 treasury bond - 100,000 Reichsmark - back.]

    [Below: Prussian Landesrentenbank (National Pension Bank) bond - 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: Prussian Landesrentenbank (National Pension Bank) bond - 200 Reichsmark - back.]

    [Below: 1942 treasury bond from Thuringia, a state in central Germany.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: 1942 treasury bond from Thuringia - back.]

    [Below: 1939 mortgage bond for 500 Reichsmark. I love the imagery on these ones!]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 mortgage bond for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1942 mortgage bond for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1937 mortgage bond for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1941 mortgage bond for 2,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1941 stock certificate for the much maligned I.G. Farben Industry (the maker of Zyklon B) for 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 stock certificate for the much maligned I.G. Farben Industry (the maker of Zyklon B) for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1935 Rentenbank certificate for 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 Landesrentenbank (State pension bank) certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: 1940 Weimar Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 100 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 Hamburg Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 100 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 Mannheim Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1943 Mannheim Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1939 Weimar Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1938 Weimar Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 Weimar Deutschen Hypothekenbank (Mortgage bank) certificate for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1938 Sachsen Schuldverschreibung certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1939 Alpine Montan Aktiengesellschaft "Hermann Göring" certificate for 100 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1940 Perlmooser Zementwerke Aktie (this is a cement company) certificate for 200 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1935 Aktie certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1941 Bayern bank bond certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1939 Schlesische Landeskreditanstalt (Silesian State Credit Institute) certificate for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1941 Schlesische Landeskreditanstalt (Silesian State Credit Institute) certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1936 Braunkohle-Benzin Aktiengesellschaft (this appears to be a fuel company) certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1941 German Worker's Front (DAF) certificate for 10,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1937 Preußische Staatsanleihe (Prussian State Bond) certificate for 100 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1937 Preußische Staatsanleihe (Prussian State Bond) certificate for 500 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1935 Anleihe des Deutschen Reichs (Loan of the German Reich) certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Seal close-up.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1938 Main-Kraftwerke Aktiengesellschaft certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: 1939 Deutsche Reichsbahn certificate for 1,000 Reichsmark.]

    [Below: Bond reverse.]

    [Below: Here is an interesting one. It is from 1936 from the 'Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts'.]

    [Below: Close-up. That woman is UGLY.]

    [Below: Here is an interesting one. It is from the 'Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts', from 1936 and payable ten years later in 1946.]

    [Below: Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts - back.]

    [Below: Conversion Office for German Foreign Debts - coupons.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: This is from 1935/36 and is a 'Konversionskasse für Deutsche Auslandsschulden' (Conversion Fund for German Foreign Debts) to Dutch Gulden currency. What these debts were I'm not sure, perhaps something to do with the criminal act of the Versailles Treaty forcing Germany to pay for World War One?]

    [Below: Back of certificate.]

    [Below: This is a Steuergutschein (Tax credit voucher) for 100 Reichsmarks from 1939.]

    [Below: Reverse of 100 Reichsmarks voucher.]

    [Below: This is a Steuergutschein (Tax credit voucher) for 200 Reichsmarks from 1939.]

    [Below: Reverse of 200 Reichsmarks voucher.]

    [Below: This is a Steuergutschein (Tax credit voucher) for 2000 Reichsmarks from 1940.]

    [Below: Reverse of 2000 Reichsmarks voucher.]

    [Below: This is a Steuergutschein (Tax credit voucher) for 5000 Reichsmarks from 1940.]

    [Below: Reverse of 5000 Reichsmarks voucher.]

    [Below: This is a check from March 8, 1945 for 'Reichsscheuldenkasse' (Reich debt fund) for ONE MILLION REICHSMARKS! I'm not sure what exactly this was for... it was endorsed by the 'Reichsscheuldenverwaltung' (Reich Debt Administration) and canceled by the 'Deutsche Länderbank' (German State Bank).]

    [Below: Reverse of check for one million Reichsmarks.]

    [Below: This 1943 bond was issued in Bohemia and Moravia (Czechoslovakia). The reverse is blank.]

    [Below: This one is not from the Third Reich, but it is so neat I just had to include it. This is from 1908.]

    [Below: Close-up.]

    [Below: Also not from the Third Reich, but I think you'll forgive me since it is just so cool looking. This is from 1918. It says:

    'Deutscher Sparkassenverband
    Kriegsanleihe-Sparkarte'

    (German Savings Banks Association
    War Bond Savings Card).

    Click to see inside.]

    [Below: Here we have what looks to be a common 1923 German inflationary 1000 mark note. But let's look at the back... Click to enlarge.]

    [Below: Wait -- what is this?! It's an early NSDAP overprint! Cool huh? I'm not sure who exactly did this, or how, but it is very professional. The overprint isn't just something some guy stamped in his house, this had to have been printed. Let's look at what it says:

    'Das Gold, das Silber und den Speck
    nahm und der Jud
    und ließ uns diesen Dreck.
    Volksgenossen, wie lange wallt Ihr Euch noch der Goldenen
    Internationale ausplündern und betrügen lassen?
    Kommt zu Hitler, werdet Nationalsocialisten.'

    (The Jew takes our Gold, Silver and Bacon
    and leaves us this crap.
    Comrades, how much longer will you wallow in
    International gold and be plundered and cheated?
    Join with Hitler,
    become a National Socialist.)

    Click to enlarge.]

    [Below: There are numerous examples of these type of overprints on money, here are a few other examples.]

    [Below: This beautiful, full-color 278 page book, entitled 'Der Jude nahm uns Silber, Gold und Speck' (The Jew Took Our Silver, Gold and Bacon), lists many of notes of the kind shown here (there are hundreds!). Like many specialized books of this kind, it is only available in German. But the book is valuable and entertaining even for those who don't understand German. (c)2015 Battenberg. Click to enlarge.]