Sarre mark banknotes

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Hi

Recently I got three notes on picture. It happens that similar banknotes I found on the web have interestingly high prices, all above 100 EUR per piece or even over 200 EUR. Can someone explain whats the catch with these banknotes and whether these on the picture are in similar league or are the just some “junk” banknotes?

Thanks for any further info.

 

 

some more interesting facts:

https://www.saar-nostalgie.de/Saar-Mark-Scheine.htm

 

LP

Tema movido a «Banknote information and questions» (ZacUK, 18 abr 2023, 23:51)

Saarland was under French administration from 1945 to 1957, when Saarland joined West Germany.

 

Saarland's notes are pretty scarce.

 

Saarland also had 4 coin types as well.

 

Aidan.

On the link posted before, it said that the banknotes were in use only for about 6 months. And that the notes were only possible to acquire if a person had a proof of residence within the Saar. The “moove” was placed in order to diminish the speculative actions of people from German side of the Border. At the end of the use, banknotes had value of some 20 Francs and many people probably swapped away these notes. 

 

So you have a short window of use, limited acquisitions only to “certified citizens” and probably a high turnover of banknotes after their intended use.

 

I am just astranged over the high printed numbers and that so little still be around?

I am just astranged over the high printed numbers and that so little still be around?

There's often a difference between the # printed (produced) & blocks of notes being stored in escrow, compared to the # issued (or released into circulation).   Most normal runs & issues occur so there's no difference/discrepancy at all.  However, there's been several time when the Central Bank or the printers hold back, destroy, or even recall a series, run, # of pallets (big blocks) of notes, etc.  It's very important to keep this in mind when collecting banknotes. 

 

A run (prefix/series) of notes are typically in batches of 10,000,000 here in Canada. In smaller island nations the runs are shorter like 1,000,000. In post-war Saarland, I'm sure they could have ordered runs in 100,000 range (Falkland Islands are in the 100,000).  You then have to factor in who was using the notes (& how were they accepted by commercial enterprises).  In Bahamas (& many island nations) they use the USD plus the Bahamian currency & both have been accepted across the island.   It could have been that the people in this region were using Francs or German Marks along with the local Saar notes (& some businesses may have preferred one over the other).  Six months of use is a blink of the eye!

 

And then, to make matters even more complicated, you have factor in how many people actually kept the notes (or could afford to keep them) at a time when money was so worthless compared to food & items needed to live.  

 

If you want a bit of a fun read for post war Germany, then I would recommend the “Berlin Noir” trilogy by Philip Kerr.  You can tell that its well researched as the main character Bernie Gunther is always discussing what currency will be more accepted in whatever region of Europe he's travelling (& as soon as he has cash he can't wait to use it on something sorely needed). Kerr gets into how the people went about rebuilding & surviving the brutally devastated aftermath.

https://sites.google.com/view/notaphilycculture/collecting-banknotes

And then, to make matters even more complicated, you have factor in how many people actually kept the notes (or could afford to keep them) at a time when money was so worthless compared to food & items needed to live.

I guess the life in these days and abundance of everything some humans really don't need (never mind the hardships ahead of the "western" hemisphere) may affects the way we perceive the value of money… I appreciate the comment!

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