It sounds like a post-WW1 commercial DWM Luger, referred to by Jan Still (author of numerous Luger books) as an "Alphabet Luger" because it was made in the commercial style but serialed with a suffix letter (your "h" or "k") as were military pistols. The chambering is likely 7.65mm or .30 caliber. The 7.65mm cartridge is a bottleneck design.
The proofs (Crown over N) are commercial. The lack of a chamber date indicates commercial and the word "GERMANY" indicates manufacture for sale abroad... usually to an English-speaking country. Look on the UNDERSIDE of the side plate and locking bolt (take-down lever) and see if the last two digits of the serial number are there... that's how commercial Lugers are marked.
Barrel length is measured from the muzzle to the breechface with the action closed. You can measure it by inserting a pencil, eraser first, into the bore of an UNLOADED pistol and measure the length of the pencil to the muzzle..... it's likely to be 98mm or approximately 3 7/8 inches.
The grips are replacements. Original grips are checkered walnut on these models. The mag may or may not be original to the gun but likely dates to the time period so could be the one that came with the pistol from the factory. I'm not certain about that though.
"GESICHERT" is German for "Safe". The extractor marking should be "GELADEN" or "Loaded".
Value is difficult to determine without actually seeing the pistol but I'd place it at $450 - $600 as a ball park range.
These are very good shooters and the most common of all Lugers, imported by the thousands after WW1. They are normally VERY accurate and I've owned a few.... all reliable and accurate. I currently have only one.... a reworked ERFURT military pistol.
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