It is likely that any notes issued at that time for such small values will be Notgeld, emergency money issued by local authorities during economic crises that was not legal tender issued by the state bank, but a local currency normally only accepted in the town of issue.
They were very common at that time in German history and issued in huge numbers, both during the crises and afterwards as collector items. Accordingly, their prices vary hugely from town to town and year to year. Most fetch $2-$5.
How much is a 50 paper bank nolte funfzig schilling worth?
.22 cents us
What is the value of a Gutschein 50 pfhennig note
Fifty pfennig is equivalent to 0.50 Deutsche Mark, as there are 100 pfennig in a Deutsche Mark. Since the Deutsche Mark is no longer in use (replaced by the Euro in 2002), its value in US dollars would depend on the historical exchange rate at the time of its circulation. However, for practical purposes today, 50 pfennig holds no direct value in US dollars.
It is worth nothing. The Germans no long use the mark, but are on the Euro. When it was used a 50 pfennig was about 5 cents. One pfennig was a penny.
Unless it's uncirculated, about 30¢ (face value)
50 to 75 cents, assuming average wear.
20 dollars
That is the mintmark of the Munich mint on this German 50 pfennig.
It is a German banknote that as of 2002 is no longer used. All German banknotes were printed with 'bundesbank deutsche mark', which is the German Federal Bank and Funfzig is German for 'fifty'.
One-half of a U.S. cent. Before the euro was adopted Germany's currency unit was the mark. One mark = 100 pfennige (that's the plural of "pfennig"). At its last valuation in 2002 the mark was worth about 50 cents (U.S.) so a pfennig was pretty far down on the scale.
1¢. At the time it was replaced by the euro (2002) the Deutschmark was worth about 50¢ U.S.