Yes there is 50 mark coin from 1878 with Wilhelm the 2th Deutsche Kaiser Konig V.Preussen on it .
If the coin shows any wear, value is for the silver at about $6.00
$1 to $7500 depending upon the mint mark, the variety and the condition of the coin.
To get an accurate value on a quarter from the late nineteenth century, the type, date, mint mark, and condition of the coin will have to be known.
the value would probbally be pretty expensive because it would be considered an antique
Please post a new, separate question with the coin's date. Without that information it's not possible to estimate a value.
It is a German Deutsche Mark.
That really depends on the year the coin was minted and the condition of the coin.
. A 5 Deutsche Mark coin is worth $3.27 USD as of 4/24/12.
That really depends on the year the coin was minted and the condition of the coin.
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.
If it's uncirculated, around $4.50. Otherwise it's only worth the face value of about $2.50 that it had when Germany adopted the euro as its currency.
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.
Please post a new question with the coin's date.
Yes there is 50 mark coin from 1878 with Wilhelm the 2th Deutsche Kaiser Konig V.Preussen on it .
Not enough information. Please post a new question with the coin's date and condition, and its mint mark if you can see it. Also, the name is Deutsche mark, just like it says on the coin.
The one Deutsche Mark (1 DM) coin was made of copper, nickel and zinc. The 5 DM Coins made before 1975 were made entirely of silver. The 10 DM coins also contained some silver. However, since Germany has been part of the Eurozone since 2002, the Deutsche Mark is no longer made and is not legal tender.