The Deutsche Mark was not used in 1863 (individual German states issued their own coinage, although copper small change was issued jointly at times). On the assumtion that you meant the 1963 deutsche mark coin, it depends on the mintmark (found below the eagle's tail) and the coin's condition. Broadly, it is worth about US$1.00 to 1.50 in circulated condition, $10 to $15 in Extremely Fine, and $110 to $200 in Uncirculated condition, with the "D" mintmark at the low end of the range, the "F" and the "G" in the middle, and the "J" at the high end of the range.
As of 2021, the deutsche mark is no longer in circulation, as it was replaced by the euro in 2002. Therefore, the value of 1863 deutsche mark would be purely historical and would need to be converted to the equivalent value in euros or another modern currency.
In 1948 all previous forms of the Deutsche Mark including the Zwanzig Deutsche mark merged into one common conversion rate. In 2002 the Deutsche Mark was considered null and void of value and was replaced by the euro.
at todays value a US dollar is less the 2 marks on the market
Deutsche Mark was created in 1948.
Deutsche Mark preceeded the Euro as the currency in West Germany
In perfect, uncirculated condition, the 1980 5 Deutsche Mark note is worth $9. In Very Fine condition, it is worth $6. In any other, non-collectible condition, it is worth face value - $3.71.
Before the Euro was introduced to Germany, their currency was the Deutsche Mark. There were 100 Pfennings in a Deutsche Mark.
It was the German Mark, also known as the Deutsche Mark.
Since adopting the Euro in 2001, Deutsche Mark notes are no longer legal tender. They have a replacement value (in a German bank) of approx $7.50. A 1989-1999 uncirculated 10DM note is worth between $10-$20, depending on signature.
1 DM (deutsche Mark) = ca. 0.48 € (Euro)
I have a 10 Zehn Deutsche Mark note, where can i sell it and who to. ww.specky@live.co.uk
"Deutsche" is German for "German." The Mark was the currency of Germany after WWII until it adopted the euro.
The German 1 Mark coins from that era were actually made of copper-nickel, and the highest collector's value would be around $4, if it's still in uncirculated condition.