German Mark was used up until 1999 when the Euro was introduced
German Mark (DEM), also known as the Deutsche Mark, was the official currency of Germany.
the German currency Deuchmarks
The Reichsmark.
1999
German Mark was used up until 1999 when the Euro was introduced
I really hope you're kidding, but the German currency is the Euro. Before that, it used to be the Deutsche Mark.
From year 1900 until they adopted the Euro in 1999, Deutsche Mark (German mark) was the German currency.
The German Mark (DEM), also known as the Deutsche Mark, was the official currency of Germany. It was replaced by the Euro in 1999. Deutsche Mark banknotes and coins stayed in circulation until 2002.
The currency in Germany before the advent of the euro was the German mark. Germany began using the euro in 2002.
German Mark (DEM), also known as the Deutsche Mark, was the official currency of Germany.
German currency in 2017 is the Euro.
Following the proclamation of the (second) German empire in 1871 a single German currency was introduced in 1873-74 called the Mark. 1 Mark = 100 Pfennig. (Before that the various German States had had their own currencies).
Since 2002 the only legal tender currency in Germany has been the Euro. The currency before that (1948-2002) was called the Deutsche Mark (DM), which was generally referred to in English as the Deutschmark or the German Mark. From 1925-1948 the currency was the Reichsmark (RM), which should not be translated.In particular, Deutsch is simply the German word for German
Before the introduction of the Euro in 1999, Belgium used the Belgian Franc
The Euro is the German currency (symbol '€').Before 2002 the currency was the Deutsche Mark (DM) or German mark.Before 1990 there were two currencies, the Deutsche Mark in the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the "Ostmark" (officially "Mark der DDR") in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany).
The German currency from 1924-1948 was the Reichsmark (abbreviated RM).