If you have a Liberty Seated Dime, the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom and can be either inside the wreath or just below it. If you have a Liberty Seated Quarter the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Liberty Seated Half Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Lbert Seated Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Silver Trade Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin a the bottom just above the "D" in "DOLLAR" If you have a Morgan Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the wreath.
The date and mint mark are on the edge of the coin, and it's worth one dollar.
No mint mark means it's from Philadelphia. It's worth exactly one cent.
It is 100*(7.50/75)% = 10% mark down.
The letter D is the mint mark so it can't both have a mint mark and not have a mint mark.Please see the related question for more information.
1.435 US$ was 100 DM in 1996. Look at the link "Historical Dollar-to-Marks Currency Conversion Page".
A 1970 paper Hundert Deutsche Mark note is no longer legal tender and its value would depend on its condition and any potential collector interest. Generally, it might be worth around $5 to $10 as a collectible item.
DM- Deutsche Mark, worth about 80 American cents
Deutsche Mark was created in 1948.
at todays value a US dollar is less the 2 marks on the market
Deutsche Mark preceeded the Euro as the currency in West Germany
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.
The Mark (or Deutsche Mark) was the German monetary unit prior to the Euro. It was the equivalent of the Dollar in America and the Pound in England. However, English speakers still refer to it as the Mark. It is not called the German Dollar or the German Pound.
1 DM (deutsche Mark) = ca. 0.48 € (Euro)
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.
I have a 10 Zehn Deutsche Mark note, where can i sell it and who to. ww.specky@live.co.uk