Wikipedia:WikiProject Numismatics/Sandbox/Succession

A page devoted to discussion currency succession and succession boxes.

Previous discussions:

Useful sources

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We need to put sources on our articles, and update the articles themselves when we do extra research for succession boxes. Here are sources we use a lot:

  • [1][dead link] (and other countries, of course)
  • Global Financial Data currency histories table[dead link]
  • Tables of modern monetary history: Africa[dead link]
  • Tables of modern monetary history: Asia[dead link]
  • Tables of modern monetary history: Australia and Pacific[dead link]
  • http://www.islamicbanknotes.com
  • Banknote World[dead link] (Its regular url http://www.banknoteworld.com/ is currently not working)
  • http://www.collectornetwork.com/articles There are some interesting articles here. It's not complete, but it has some more detail about the political situation than some of the other sites.
  • The Marteau Early 18th-Century Currency Converter
  • http://www.germannotes.com
  • Foreign Currency Units per 1 British Pound, 1948-2005, PACIFIC Exchange Rate Service
  • Foreign Currency Units per 1 U.S. Dollar, 1948-2005, PACIFIC Exchange Rate Service
  • Information on Exchange Rates of The Americas[dead link]
  • A Chronology of Monetary Integration in Britain and Europe
  • [2]
  • £ = $2.8 from 1950-1966
  • Standard Catalog of World Coins (cut and paste the following for a reference -- I was never any good at citations, but with the ISBN it doesn't matter as much. I got these titles off of booksellers' websites):
    • Chester L. Krause, Cliffor Mischler, Colin R. Bruce II, et al. (editors), ed. (2001). 2002 Standard Catalog of World Coins (29th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873492439. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
    • Chester L. Krause, Cliffor Mischler, Colin R. Bruce II, et al. (editors), ed. (1996). Standard Catalog of World Coins 1997 (24th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873414268. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
    • Chester L. Krause, Cliffor Mischler, Colin R. Bruce II, et al. (editors), ed. (2003). 2004 Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1901-present (31st ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87349-593-4. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
    • Chester L. Krause, Cliffor Mischler, Colin R. Bruce II, et al. (editors), ed. (2004). Standard Catalog of World Coins: 19th Century 1801-1900 (4th ed.). KP Books. ISBN 0-87349-798-8. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  • Standard Catalog of World Paper Money
    • George S. Cuhaj, (S. editor), ed. (2005). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, Vol. 3: Modern Issues, 1961-Date (11th ed.). KP Books. ISBN 0896891607. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)
    • Albert Pick (1996). Neil Shafer, George S. Cuhaj, Colin R. Bruce II (editors) (ed.). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money: General Issues to 1960 (8th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87341-469-1. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
    • George S. Cuhaj, ed. (2006). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, Modern Issues, 1961-present (12th ed.). KP Books. ISBN 0-89689-356-1.

Global Financial Data

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I think that GFD may change the name of the currency every time the country name/colonization changes. So, for example, they list East Africa rupee in 1916 until 1920, and the introduction of the EA florin. Yet SCWC does not show that currency. I don't have SCWPM though. I'm wondering if this is the situation with the Yugoslav krone as well. Do you know if the information at Austro-Hungarian krone is correct as far as overstamping? And if that means that the ones that are not mentioned didn't overstamp? Ingrid 03:31, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The 3 countries listed in Austro-Hungarian krone ("Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes", Czechoslovakia, Austria) did overstamp. Hungary aldo overstamp in 1920. Romanian leu and Italian lira were not applicable, of course, since they existed long before. Since you don't have SCWPM, I'll try to put some catalog stuff here to help. --Chochopk 11:41, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. Apparently, I misunderstood, since there is a EA rupee, and apparently a Yugoslav krone which was only used briefly. Thanks for the details. I took a day off, and you've gone and finished all the work! I'm going to try to catch up, but don't know how much time I'll get for it today. Ingrid 21:04, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Questions

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I thought it would be helpful to have a section for general questions, so they don't get lost as easily. Hopefully it won't just get too full.

Ethiopia

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I'm confused about the whole talari/birr/dollar issue for the Ethiopian currency. Generally, I like to use whatever the coins/notes say, but with a different alphabet, that get's more challenging. I've tried to look at various sources, and can't find anything definitive. The early notes do say "thaler" <[3][dead link]> in what looks like French of all languages. I don't know enough of the Ethiopian text to even transliterate. I think I'll post to Talk:Ethiopian birr. Do you have any insight? Ingrid 02:16, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

There was already a comment on Talk:Ethiopian birr, so I asked the author (who can read Amharic). He said that the "deux thaler" note at banknoteworld.com clearly says "two birr" in Amharic. So, it looks like the currency has always been birr, and talari is probably just the Italian for thaler. Although, during occupation, Italian was probably the official language. Still, it seems to me like it's appropriate to call it birr the whole time. What do you think? Ingrid 04:37, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This poses an very interesting question. What if there is an official translation, often printed on the note, that is different from its local name. We know for a fact:
  • Ethiopian talari printed as thaler(s) in french in the early days, birr in Amharic (looks like "∩C")
  • Translated as dollar in English, still "birr" in Amharic after WW2, until 1976
  • Translated as birr in English afterward
In the case of Taiwan and China
  • When China was ruled by the Nationalist (and war lords) from 1911-1949 (the Republic era), 1/2 banknotes were printed with "dollar", 1/2 with "yuan", if there was English at all. Those notes in Chinese were all yuan (圓). Example of dollar, front[dead link] Example of dollar, back[dead link] Example of yuan, front[dead link] Example of yuan, back[dead link]. The catalog uses "yuan" consistently.
  • The Nationalist retreated to Taiwan after the Communist took over Mainland China. The unit is still yuan (圓). Early notes are printed with "yuan" in English (Example[dead link]). The government, however, has kept using "dollar" in its translated official documents. The catalog uses "yuan" consistently.
  • The name of the article on wikipedia are New Taiwan dollar. I can't find the article on pre-1949 yuan/dollar
Switzerland
  • German is clearly the language of majority. But people still call the currency Swiss franc, not franken.
Ethiopia is just a subset of this problem. So what do we use? local form all the way? or official translation if available (even if different from local form), otherwise local form?? --Chochopk 06:26, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And I was hoping you would have the answers, not more questions.
Switzerland is an interesting example, because they go out of their way not to have one form be more official than the other. On the coins, it's Confoederatio (sp?) Helvetica, and franc is always "Fr." which is the same abbreviation for all 4 official languages. Notes have all four.
Belgium is another interesting example. The coins are made in two varieties, German (or Flemish, really), and French although the denomination is often abbreviated, but not always. Notes seem to be the same way.
I think whenever known, we can use "common usage". That would handle Belgium and Switzerland, since they're clearly usually referred to as "francs". Taiwan also, is clearly known as "dollar" for the new one anyway. But that still leaves Ethiopia, and I'm not sure what the right thing to do is. And I still don't understand where "talari" comes from (that is, why GFD uses it). The Ethiopian birr page mentions that "birr" means silver, and was used as the local name for the MTT as well as the new Ethiopian coins. My inclination is to use "birr", since that's what locals called it, and there's no other local name -- that is, they called MTTs birr also, but MTTs aren't local to Ethiopia. The Ethiopian whatever is local to Ethiopia and called birr there, so there you go. Of course, I could make an argument for thaler for the early ones and dollar for 45-76 if you want to hear it. I'd say let's take it to the whole project, but I'm not sure I want to go there. Ingrid 16:25, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't have any strong preference toward either, as long as the detail is documented. If we are to merge talari with birr, then we better note that its French translation was thaler. --Chochopk 17:59, 26 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
done (merged into birr which already had all the relevant info) Ingrid 21:38, 28 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
FYI: the Belgian case : the last Belgian notes had the currency in three languages, the three official languages of the country : Dutch, French and German. Coins were Dutch and/or French. --LucVerhelst 08:56, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Principle (non country specific) discussion

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How to handle "roots" currencies

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Template style

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Is it better to put spaces around the dash (like 1960 - 1965)?

Spaces would be fine with me -- I'm not sure if there's a standard way to do it. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Done --Chochopk 13:30, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

If we have more than 1 box in an article, what kind of font should be used as the title of those boxes? (like "old won" in South Korean won?)

I'm not sure about box titles and such. I've been thinking we might want to add a <hr> to the n-start template, but that would mess up multiple boxes. One thing we could do is put a new template for a box title (for when it's not the same as the article title). The Template:s-start system has that for the house. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Done, see South Korean won as an example --Chochopk 13:30, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I like how you've done the title. One thing I think is important is that we come up with currency names that are distinct (whether it's with parentheses or otherwise). I think it's easiest to use the descriptive words at GFD, but am open to other ideas. An example using GFD names (not exactly, since they use "Loas", but using their descriptive words), "Lao old kip", "Lao liberation kip", "Lao new kip". Often, GFD doesn't use "old", and I think that's fine. It can sometimes lead to a situation like the "French new franc" (nouveau in GFD) coming before the "French franc". But it also tends to give a "common use" name, and come close to matching ISO 4217 in most cases (I think).
Whatever we use though, I think it's important to use the same thing in succession box titles and before/after succession sections, to make it clear which currency is being referred to. Ingrid 19:14, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I updated the template instructions. Mostly just grammar ... Ingrid 22:32, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You changed the text to "The life of the currency is less than 2 years (if the start and end year are the same or one year apart)." It actually changed what I meant. I meant to say, if the end year minus the start year = 2, then it is possible that the life is longer than 2 years, or shorter. But if the end year minus the start year = 1, then we know for sure that its life is less than 2 years. Do you think it's better to keep it this way (life < 2 years), or change it to (end year - start year <= 2)? --Chochopk 01:04, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't mean to change what you'd said. As I said before, I don't care for including the day/month, but don't mind doing whatever you want. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What happens when there is no predecessor

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I think we say Primitive currency or "no modern predecessor" or something like that. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Done --Chochopk 04:29, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

x new = y old or y old = x new

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See discussion in South African rand

Was there an open issue on this? I think it was just my repeating my question of using separate variables, and your reminding me that that would not work. If there's something that still needs to be resolved, remind me here please. Ingrid 23:38, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I believe this discussion has a conclusion. I just put a reference here so that someone can read them, if they want. --Chochopk 01:23, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Date of independence

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I updated the template instructions. Mostly just grammar, but I also took out your mention of how to handle if recognized independence is differnet from declared independence. Since we're dealing with currency, I don't think it matters what date independence happened -- usually, currency is introduced well after independence. Ingrid 22:32, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think it is important when we use the 4 column format. The date of independence will go to the start date of the third column. --Chochopk 01:04, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I'd forgotten that. I'm not sure what's best. it might be hard to have a standard that makes sense for all situations (for example, some currencies exist for unrecognized countries -- Somaliland shilling) Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I believe it is better to use the date of declaration. Most people would say 1776 is the year for the U.S.A.. No one would say 1783. Also the CIA factbook lists only the date of declaration too. Moreover, if the independence is eventually recognized, the new country will probably celebrate their national day on the date of declaration too. I'll add this to the guide line. --Chochopk 13:30, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You're probably right in general. I was also thinking of Namibia, although I didn't mention it. 1990 is a case of recognized independence which is the only useful date to use. Maybe that's an isolated case -- I don't really know. Ingrid 19:18, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Naming convention

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As far as naming conventions for currencies, the project has chosen ISO 4217, and no one seems to care that that doesn't help us. So, I think it's reasonable for us to use the old style of <adjectival form of country name> <currency name>. When we need disambiguation, I think we should use (detail), for example, Cambodian riel (1955) and Cambodian riel (1980). It's not clear to me when it's appropriate to use new/old. I prefer to use whatever is on the currency itself, but that leads to problems because currencies often have "new" for a little while then drop it even though the currency hasn't changed. I do think it's important to use the same name in the succession box that we use in the article/label (see below). Ingrid 22:32, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I really don't know what they want to do with ISO there. They just talk and little is implemented. I don't think anyone will carry out the renaming of all currencies to their ISO codes. That is just ridiculous. I agree that we should use <adjectival form of country name> <currency name> (except for "Common name" like Taiwan dollar or Singapore dollar). I also agree that we should use disambiguation, either "Cambodian riel (1955)" or "1955 Cambodian riel" is fine for me. Perhaps the first one is the style of wikipedia. About new/old, I'm not so sure either. I'm thinking we can use new/old on the title of the currency when it cannot be mistaken in the context (e.g. there've been only 2 kinds of Taiwan dollar), or in the ratio attribute even when there were many (like Yugoslavian dinar). If this is the case, then we would probably have to say 1 euro = 13 Austrian "new" schilling.
This is also related to the question to split or not to split. I don't think we have to stubburnly split whenver there is a redenomination. That could result in many, but unsubstantial articles. We can follow the current style of South Korean won. In this case, we could apply it to Cambodian riel, Vietnamese đồng. In a nutshell, have more than one box in an article. --Chochopk 01:04, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I switched new/old below (on all but Vietnamese dong) based on GFD table. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

If we are forced to write out the long form of a country, like "Federal Socialist Islamic Democratic People's Republic of xxx", should the box read "Currency of the Federal Socialist Islamic Democratic People's Republic of xxx"? --Chochopk 10:19, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yes. We should be using correct grammar. —Nightstallion (?) 10:25, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Mother of all currencies

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This is the section where we can keep track of the "roots" currencies, so that we won't miss a former colony when doing the ultimate currencies.

I've been thinking about how these should be handled. I think it would be great if we could include everything, but it will be huge (I'm thinking especially of British pound, but the others too). But maybe if we made a separate page like British pound succession and linked to it, it wouldn't upset the people who care about the currency but not the succession -- to be fair, this is probably most people who are reading the main page. This might also be a good idea for the euro, even though it's not nearly as complex, it's just got so many predecessors (and more to come). Ingrid 03:01, 13 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I must be crazy to start doing this --Chochopk 14:31, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Tell me about it. There are some things I want to get to, but trying to keep up with you keeps me too busy. But I think we're doing great work. Ingrid 01:24, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  1. Belgian franc (1832, Belgium)
  2. Netherlands Antillean gulden (1940, Netherlands Antilles)
  3. Surinamese gulden (1962, Surinam)
  4. Euro

British pound

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  1. British Central Africa group
  2. British South Africa group
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of United Kingdom
1560/61
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Nyasaland
ca. 18941940
Succeeded by:
Southern Rhodesian pound
Reason: creation of local currency
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Southern Rhodesia
ca. 18921940
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Northern Rhodesia
ca. 19061940


  1. CFA franc
  2. Pacific franc
  3. Swiss franc???
  4. Lebanon-Syria???

French franc was in use in :

Indian rupee

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  1. British East Africa group
  2. Gulf rupee
  3. South Asia group (India, Burma, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan)
Preceded by:
???
Currency of German East Africa
(Tanganyika, Burundi, Rwanda)
??? – 1905
Succeeded by:
German East African rupie
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of East Africa
(Kenya, Uganda)
? – 1906
Succeeded by:
East African rupee
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Zanzibar
? – ca. 1908
Concurrent with: Zanzibari riyal
Succeeded by:
Zanzibari rupee
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of British Somaliland
brefore 18871940
Succeeded by:
Italian East African lira
Reason: captured by Italy
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Italian Somaliland
18891910
Concurrent with: Maria Theresa thaler and Eritrean tallero
Succeeded by:
Italian Somaliland rupia
Reason: creation of a local currency
Ratio: at par, and 1 Italian Somaliland rupia = 1.68 Italian lira
Preceded by:
???
Currency of Aden
ca. 18941951
Succeeded by:
East African shilling
Ratio: 1 shilling = 1 British shilling
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Bahrain
18801959
Succeeded by:
Gulf rupee
Ratio: at par
Currency of Kuwait
18991959
Currency of Muscat
18911959
Currency of Qatar
18921959
Currency of Trucial States
18921959
Preceded by:
Some Ottoman currency
Currency of Iraq
ca. 19201931
Note: some source says it ended in 1932
Succeeded by:
Iraqi dinar
Ratio: 1 dinar = 13 1/3 rupees = 1 British pound
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Najd
? – 1918
Concurrent with: Ottoman kuruş, Egyptian qirsh, Maria Theresa thaler
Succeeded by:
Najd coins
Ratio: see article
Preceded by:
currencies of the Indian states
Currency of British India
18351947
Succeeded by:
Pakistani rupee
Reason: Partition of India
Ratio: at par
Currency of India
1947
Note: some states and union territories joined later, between 1961 and 1954
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
currencies of Danish India
Reason: sold/ceded to the U.K.
Note: from 1839 to 1869
Preceded by:
French Indian rupee
Location: French India
Reason: integrating with India from 1947 to 1954
Preceded by:
Portuguese Indian escudo
Location: Portuguese India
Reason: integrating with India in 1961
French Indian rupia
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of French India
? – 1954
Succeeded by:
Indian rupee
Reason: integrating with India
Portuguese Indian rupia
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Portuguese India
? – 1958
Succeeded by:
Portuguese Indian escudo
Reason: unifiying the currencies of the Portuguese colonies
Ratio: at par with Portuguese escudo, or 1 escudo = 1/6 rupia
Portuguese Indian escudo
Preceded by:
Portuguese Indian rupia
Reason: unifiying the currencies of the Portuguese colonies
Ratio: at par with Portuguese escudo, or 1 escudo = 1/6 rupia
Currency of Portuguese India
19581961
Succeeded by:
Indian rupee
Reason: integrating with India

Spanish and Mexican silver dollars

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  1. Malaysia/Singapore group
  2. French Indochina
  3. North America
  4. Hong Kong??

Mexican peso

First peso
Preceded by:
Spanish gold escudo and Spanish real de plata fuerte
Ratio: 1 peso = 8 reales = 0.5 escudo
Currency of New Spain
17321821
Currency of Mexico
1821December 31, 1992
Succeeded by:
Second peso
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 new peso = 1000 old pesos
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Circulates in Thirteen Colonies
? – 1785
Note: declared independence in 1776
Currency of United States
17851792
Note: officially recognized and used until 1857
Succeeded by:
United States dollar
Reason: independence
Ratio: at par
Second peso
Preceded by:
first peso
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 new peso = 1000 old pesos
Currency of Mexico
January 1, 1993
Succeeded by:
Current
  1. Somalia
  2. Ethiopia
  3. North Yemen
  4. Middle East??
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Ethiopia
ca. 1800 – 1906? 1894?
Succeeded by:
Abyssinian talari
Ratio: at par
Note: Maria Theresa thaler still circulates until probably 1931
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Italian Somaliland
18891909
Concurrent with: Indian rupee
Succeeded by:
Italian Somaliland rupia
Ratio: at par with Indian rupee
Note: Maria Theresa thaler still circulates until the late 1910s
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Hejaz
? – 1916
Concurrent with: Ottoman kuruş, Egyptian qirsh
Succeeded by:
Hejazi riyal
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Najd
? – 1918
Concurrent with: Ottoman kuruş, Egyptian qirsh, Indian rupee
Succeeded by:
Najd coins
Ratio: see article

Japanese occupied money

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  1. Malaysia/Singapore group
  2. Burma
  3. Philippines
  4. Indonesia
  5. British Oceania

Japanese yen

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  1. Korea
  2. Taiwan

German reichsmark

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  1. Austria
  2. Czechoslovakia
  3. Denmark
  4. Estonia
  5. Latvia
  6. Lithuania
  7. Luxembourg
  8. Netherlands
  9. Poland
  10. Danzig
  11. Saar
  12. Slovakia
  13. Slovenia

Italian lira

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See Italian Empire (unification 17 March 1861)
SCWPM starts at Law 1874
Eritrean Tallero 1891[dead link]

Preceded by:
various state currencies
Reason: unification
Ratio: some state lira were already very close to the unified lira
Currency of Italy
1861December 31, 2001
Note: euro existed as an accounting currency since 1 January 1999
Succeeded by:
euro
Reason: deployment of euro cash
Ratio: 1 euro = 1936.27 lira
Preceded by:
Austro-Hungarian krone
Location: South Tyrol and Trieste
Reason: became part of Italy in 1918
Preceded by:
Ethiopian talari
Reason: annaxed by Italy into Italian East Africa
Ratio: 1 lira = 5 talari
Currency of Ethiopia
1936 – ca. 1938
Succeeded by:
Italian East African lira
Reason: creation of a local currency
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
Italian Somaliland rupia
Ratio: 1 lira = 8 rupees
Currency of Italian Somaliland
1925 – ca. 1938
Concurrent with: Italian Somaliland lira
Preceded by:
Maria Theresa thaler
Ratio: 5 lira = 1 thaler
Currency of Eritrea
1922 – ca. 1938
Preceded by:
Eritrean tallero
Ratio: 5 lira = 1 tallero
Currency of Libya
19121941
Succeeded by:
This is a stub
Note: This list of stubs may not be complete
Preceded by:
Yugoslav 1920 dinar
Reason: Italian occupation
Currency of Montenegro, Italy occupied portion of Slovenia
19411945
Succeeded by:
Yugoslav 1945 dinar
Reason: reunification of Yugoslavia as a result of World War II and end of Italian occupation

New boxes

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Zanzibar revisited

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moved to article. --Chochopk 12:36, 9 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Persian gulf

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Note: GFD table actually says this was used in Muscat only (not Muscat and Oman), but it doesn't say what was used in Oman before the Omani rial. I need to do more research -- check www.islamicbanknotes.com, and elsewhere. Ingrid 00:54, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
added more detail from http://www.islamicbanknotes.com/gulfrupees%20(article).htm. I'm going to added concurrent with to the template, and will update this after that. Ingrid 03:39, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Should we split Omani rial into Omani rial and Saidi rial (1970-1973)? --Chochopk 14:15, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure about those. User:Dove1950 said that he thought they were the same currency... Where was it? At Talk:Yemeni rial. That was about the Ahmadi rial and Imadi rial, but he mentioned the Oman situation. I didn't know whether those should be considered separate currencies, and he thought they shouldn't. So, I suggest you check with him. I just don't know enough about it to have a valuable opinion. Ingrid 02:57, 24 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Note to self (--Chochopk 14:15, 22 January 2006 (UTC)) (Finally)[reply]

I would like to finish this region. All we need is to clear up Oman, the what came before Saudi Arabia (Hejaz, and Najd). I don't have strong preference toward either to split or not to split Omani rial. --Chochopk 09:02, 27 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm doing some work with recategorizing, and trying to spend less time on the computer, so I may not check in here as often for a little while. I don't care about splitting or not. Dove seemed to think they shouldn't be split, so let's go with that. Feel free to move whatever you want. I trust you, and if you want me to check something, you can leave a note here, and I'll check it on the main page when I get time. Which reminds me, I used "Ethiopian thaler birr" and "Ethiopian birr" for the pre-1936 birr and post-1945 birr. I couldn't think of anything better. Ingrid 21:42, 28 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

sources:

Move. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hejaz independent in 1916, then started CM on Turkish, Egyptian, and MMT until AH1338 (year starting 9/26/1919), when it started minting its own coins. Hejaz riyal = MMT = EGP = 1.1 TUK.
I wish to consider CM coins as a new currency, like over stamped banknotes
also issued banknotes in pound. Very very very rare.

Preceded by:
Ottoman kuruş, Egyptian qirsh, Maria Theresa thaler
Ratio: 1 riyal = 1 thaler = 1 qirsh = 1.1 kuruş
Currency of Hejaz
19161928
Note: countermarked coins before 1920
Succeeded by:
Hejazi and Najdi riyal
Reason: merging with Najd
Ratio: at par

CM only

Preceded by:
Ottoman kuruş, Egyptian qirsh, Maria Theresa thaler, Indian rupee
Ratio: 1 riyal = 1 thaler = 20 qirsh = 22 kuruş = about 2 rupees
Currency of Hejaz
19181928
Succeeded by:
Hejazi and Najdi riyal
Reason: merging with Najd
Ratio: at par

Coin started AH1346 (year starting 1927/7/1) Najdi occupation of Hejaz in 1925

Preceded by:
Najdi riyal
Location: Najd
Reason: merging with Hejaz
Ratio: at par
Currency of Kingdom of Hijaz and Nejd
19281932
Currency of Saudi Arabia
19321936
Succeeded by:
Saudi riyal
Reason: creation of Saudi Arabia
Ratio: 1 sovereign riyal = 0.5 Hejazi and Najdi riyal = 0.05 British Pound
Preceded by:
Hejazi riyal
Location: Hejaz
Reason: merging with Najd
Ratio: at par

Raw data:

  • Political
    • The Saudi state began in central Arabia in 1744. A local ruler, Muhammad bin Saud, joined forces with an Islamic reformer, Muhammad Ibn Abd Al-Wahhab, to create a new political entity.
    • Najd was conquered by the Wahhabi forces of Abdul Aziz ibn Abdul Rahman ibn Saud, from the Ottoman Empire, during the period of 1899–1912
    • TMMH: By 1904 Ibn Sa'ud ('Abd al-'Aziz II) had recovered all of the original Sa'udi territory in central Arabia (the Najd)
    • In 1916 Hejaz's independence was proclaimed by Husain ibn Ali, the Sherif of Makkah.
    • In 1924, however, ibn Ali's authority was usurped by ibn Saud of the neighboring nation of Nejd
    • In 1925 the Sa'ūds captured the holy city of Mecca
    • On January 8, 1926 Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud became the King of Hijaz.
    • By the Treaty of Jedda, signed on May 20, 1927, the United Kingdom recognized the independence of Abdul Aziz's realm (then known as the Kingdom of Hijaz and Nejd).
    • Unification 23 September 1932
  • Monetary
    • TMMH: 1517-1916?: fixed (as part of currency union); officially used Ottoman currency, in practice used silver Maria Theresa thalers and other foreign currencies
    • TMMH: 1912-9 July 1915: The Ottoman Bank opened a branch in Jiddah. It issued its first notes on 16 November 1863. The Ottoman government issued notes from 28 August 1876-12 March 1880, but they seem to have circulated little outside Constantinople (now Istanbul).
    • TMMH: 1916?-22 January? 1928: Apparently, Saudi Arabia adopted the Turkish silver medjidie as its standard coin after independence. It is unclear whether adoption was formal or informal. The silver medjidie was equal to 20 silver piastres, or one-fifth of a prewar Ottoman pound (lira).
    • TMMH: 23 January? 1928-1936: The Saudi riyal, equal in size and silver content to the old Turkish silver medjidie, existed only as a silver coin; it was the official unit of account. British gold sovereigns were widely used. 10 Saudi riyals = UK£1
    • GFD: 1800-01/01/1936: Arabic kingdoms: Maria Theresa Thaler
    • GFD: 1800-10/22/1952: Arabic kingdoms: British Gold Sovereign (Pound Sterling)
    • GFD: 06/10/1916-09/22/1932: Hejaz: Saudi Arabian Riyal = 1 MMT = 0.2 GBP
    • GFD: 08/22/1921-09/22/1932: Nejd: Saudi Arabian Riyal
    • GFD: 01/22/1928-01/01/1936: Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabian Riyal
    • coin catalog:Hejaz countermarked coinage: on AH1327//2-//9 (=AH1328-AH1335). 1 dinar = 5 riyal, 1 riyal = 20 piastres, 1 piastre = 40 para. Para coins CM on Turkish para. Piastre coins CM on Turkish kurish & Egyptian qirsh. 20 piastres also on 1 MMT. By logical deduction, dinar = pound = livre, riyal = dollar.
    • coin catalog: regular coinage of Hejaz earliest in AH1334//5 = AH1338 (starting 11/9 1915). 1 riyal = 24.1g * 0.917 Ag
    • coin catalog: Mecca (occupied by bin Sa'ud): AH1343-1344 (1343 starts 8/2 1924, 1344 starts 7/22 1925)
    • coin catalog: Hejaz & Nejd: AH1346-1348 (AH 1/1/1346 = 7/1 1927, AH 1/1/1348 = 6/9 1929). riyal = 24.1 g * 0.917 Ag
    • coin catalog: Nejd: 1918. Piaster CM on Egyptian piaster or Turkish kurush, rupee CM on Indian rupee, 20 piastres also CM on MMT.
    • banknote catalog: Hejaz pound in 1924. 1 pound (riyal) = 20 ghirsh (piastres). No Najd or Nejd listed.

Major related coins of the time

Coin weight (g) purity metal real content (g) note
Turkish 20 kurus 24.055 0.83 Ag 19.96565
Egyptian 20 piastres 28 0.833 Ag 23.324 it's been like this at least before 1910
MMT 28.0668 .833 Ag 23.3796444 data from wiki
Indian rupee 11.66? 0.917 Ag 10.6922
Hejaz riyal 24.1 0.917 Ag 22.0997

    • TMMH: 1936-July 1948: Saudi Arabia minted a new, greatly debased silver coin equal in size and silver content to the Indian silver rupee. 20 new Saudi riyals = 7.32238g gold (1 gold UK sovereign)
    • TMMH: July 1948-third quarter 1951: revalue excnahge rate
    • GFD: 01/01/1936-10/22/1952: Saudi Arabia: Saudi Sovereign (new) Riyal = 2 Saudi Arabian (old) Riyal = 0.1 GBP (contradiction with TMMH and catalog. Should be 1 new = 0.5 old = 0.05 GBP.)
    • coin catalog: 1935 is the first year of Saudi Arabian riyal coin, 11.6 g * 0.917 Ag. 1 riyal = 20-22 ghirsh

    • TMMH: third quarter 1951: This rate was chosen such that 40 riyals = 1 British gold sovereign. 3-15/22 Saudi riyals = US$1. became formal on 22 October 1952
    • GFD: 10/22/1952-: Saudi Riyal. 1 USD = 3.75 SAR
    • coin catalog: the earliest "reform coinage" started in 1963. no precious metal. new subunit halala. 1 riyal = 100 halala, 1 ghirsh = 5 halala
    • banknote catalog: the earliest in 1953. The pilgrim receipt. It was recalled in 1963 and demonetized on 3/20/1964
    • banknote catalog: regular issue in 1961

What happened around 1952? Was the riyal revalued? Neither TMMH nor GFD gives an affirmative answer, only that it it pegged to a new anchor currency - USD. So I must look up the exchange rate between USD and GBP around that time.

  • http://www.mises.org/money/4s5.asp says $2.4.
  • Using price index to reverse engineer the approximate the exchange rate: index in UK in 10/1952: 10.1, 12/2005: 194.1. Inflation calculator: $1 in 1952 = $7.37 in 2005. exchange rate on 12/15/2005 £ = $1.77270. In this sense, £ in 1952 = $4.62 in 1952.
  • Just before peg to USD, 40 riyals = 1 British gold sovereign = 7.32238g gold = 0.2354 Troy ounces. And 1 ounce of gold was like $20 or $33, I'm not sure, if $33, then 1 USD = 4.85 riyal, if $20, then 1 USD = 8.5 riyal?!?!?!? This is confusing.
  • £ = $2.8 from 1950-1966. So TMMH somewhat contradicts itself. IT says third quarter 1951-21 October 1952, 3-15/22 Saudi riyals = US$1, and also 40 riyals = 1 British gold sovereign = 7.32238g. And GB£ ~= 2.491 g of gold (calculated from the section of India). So $1 = £1/2.8 = 2.491/2.8 g of gold = 2.491/2.8/(7.32238/40) riyal = 4.86 riyals, which is 32% more than 3 15/22 riyals.
Preceded by:
Hejaz and Najd riyal
Reason: creation of Saudi Arabia
Ratio: 1 sovereign riyal = 0.5 Hejazi and Najdi riyal = 0.05 British Pound
Currency of Saudi Arabia
1936
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Gulf rupee
Reason: devaluation of the Gulf rupee before delivery of replacement
Circulates in Qatar and Trucial States except for Abu Dhabi
June, 1966 – September, 1966
Succeeded by:
Qatari and Dubai riyal
Reason: local currency delivered
Ratio: 1.065 Qatari and Dubai riyals = 1 Saudi riyal, or 1 Qatari and Dubai riyal = 1 pre-devalued Gulf rupee

Qatari and Dubai riyal (it currently redirects to Qatari riyal)

edit

Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

result different depending on split or not split
Another step toward completion
Moved. --Chochopk 06:18, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Preceded by:
Indian rupee
Ratio: 1 dinar = 13 1/3 rupees = 1 British pound
Currency of Iraq
19311991
Note: some source says it was delayed until 1932
Succeeded by:
Current
Location: Iraq except Iraqi Kurdistan
Succeeded by:
Swiss dinar
Location: Iraqi Kurdistan
Note: The "currency" was in fact the old notes that evaded the currency confiscation
Preceded by:
Kuwaiti dinar
Currency of Kuwait
August 2, 1990 – early 1991
Note: Iraqi occupation
Succeeded by:
Kuwaiti dinar
Ratio: = pre-war Kuwaiti dinar
Preceded by:
Iraqi dinar
Ratio: at par
Note: The "currency" was in fact the old notes that evaded the currency confiscation
Currency of Iraqi Kurdistan
19912003
Succeeded by:
Iraqi dinar
Reason: fall of Saddam Hussein's regime

  • 1798-1801: French occupation of Egypt
  • 1805: Muhammad Ali established a semi-independent dynasty of Egypt
  • 1817: Serbia gained autonomy
  • 1821: Beginning of the Greek War of Independence.
  • 1830: Algeria's gradual cession to French rule.
  • 1832: Greek sovereignty formalized.
  • 1856: Establishment of a united Romanian autonomous state.
  • 1876: Occupation of Cyprus by Britain.
  • 1877: Romanian War of Independence began
  • 1878: Treaty of San Stefano - recognition of Romanian and Serbian independence, as well as the establishment of an autonomous Bulgarian principality under nominal Ottoman protection. Austria-Hungary occupies Bosnia by default.
  • 1881: As the Empire celebrates its 600th anniversary, Tunisia becomes a French colony.
  • 1882: Egypt under British protection.
  • 1885: Province of Eastern Rumelia transferred to Bulgarian jurisdiction.
  • 1908: Austria-Hungary annexes Bosnia by mere declaration; Bulgaria obtains full independence.
  • 1911: Ottomans easily defeated by Italy in a short war, with the Italians gaining Libya; thus the 340-year Ottoman presence in North Africa is brought to an end.
  • 1912: First Balkan War; Albania declares independence; Ottoman Empire nearly wiped out from Europe, save for Istanbul and just enough land around to defend it.
  • 1914: Cyprus annexed outright by Britain. Entry of the Empire into World War I on the side of the Central Powers.
  • 1920: Treaty of Sèvres. Hejaz (now part of Saudi Arabia), Armenia and Assyria were to become independent. Kurdistan was to be given autonomy. In accordance with the wartime Sykes-Picot Agreement, Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Palestine were assigned under mandate to the tutelage of the United Kingdom, Lebanon and an enlarged Syria to that of France. The Dodecanese and Rhodes (already under Italian occupation since 1911), with portions of southern Anatolia, were to pass to Italy, while Thrace and Western Anatolia, including the key port of Smyrna (now Izmir), would become part of Greece.
  • 1920: Formation of Turkish Parliament
  • 1923: Declaration of the Republic of Turkey

Finally, I got this part. But what's the earliest coins denominated as lira? --Chochopk 15:37, 29 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Ottoman Empire
Unknown – 1844
Succeeded by:
Ottoman gold lira
Reason: creation of a new unit for the new bimetallic standard. Kuruş became a subunit
Ratio: 1 lira = 100 kuruş
Note: But Kuruş remained a popular unit even for amount larger than 1 lira
Preceded by:
Ottoman kuruş
Reason: creation of a new unit for the new bimetallic standard. Kuruş became a subunit
Ratio: 1 lira = 100 kuruş
Note: But Kuruş remained a popular unit even for amount larger than 1 lira
Currency of Ottoman Empire
18441921
Concurrent with: Ottoman paper lira
Succeeded by:
Turkish lira
Reason: founding of a new republic (officially in 1923)
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Ottoman Empire
ca. 18401921
Concurrent with: Ottoman gold lira
Succeeded by:
Turkish lira
Reason: founding of a new republic (officially in 1923)
Ratio: 1 Turkish lira = 3~9 paper lira
Preceded by:
Ottoman gold lira
Reason: founding of a new republic (officially in 1923)
Ratio: at par
Currency of Turkey
1921January 1, 2005
Succeeded by:
Turkish new lira
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 new lira = 1,000,000 old lira
Preceded by:
Ottoman paper lira
Reason: founding of a new republic (officially in 1923)
Ratio: 1 Turkish lira = 3~9 paper lira
Preceded by:
Cypriot pound
Currency of Northern Cyprus
1975January 1, 2005
Preceded by:
Turkish lira
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 new lira = 1,000,000 old lira
Currency of Turkey, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
January 1, 2005
Note: Northern Cyprus is not widely recognized
Succeeded by:
Current

£ = 100 piastres

Preceded by:
Egyptian coins very similar to Ottoman coins
Reason: currency reform
Ratio: 1 pound = 7.4375g gold
Currency of Egypt
1834
Succeeded by:
Current
Currency of Sudan
18341957
Concurrent with: British pound
Succeeded by:
Sudanese pound
Reason: independence (in 1956)
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
Egyptian pound
Reason: independence (in 1956)
Ratio: at par
Currency of Sudan
19571992
Currency of Northern Sudan
1992
Succeeded by:
Sudanese dinar
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 dinar = 10 pounds
Currency of Southern Sudan
1992
Note: see Second Sudanese Civil War
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Sudanese pound
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 dinar = 10 pounds
Currency of Northern Sudan
1992
Succeeded by:
Current

The more I do, the more I realize the importance of the previous metal content in coins. I believe understanding Latin Monetary Union is crucial to do these european currencies (of course), and Ottoman too. I will first construct the table of the start and end date for the coins that are compatible with the LMU's standard, and some other important ones. Unfortunately, I don't have a coin catalog for the 19th century. So I would need some help for the start date. --Chochopk 11:08, 29 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

As usual, you've impressed me. I started trying to write a Latin Monetary Union page, and found it frustrating. The information on Wikipedia does not match the several dates I found when searching the internet. My only real (non-internet) source is SCWC, and I didn't think to check the metal content. I'm thinking I might try the real-life library at some point. I believe the LMU was gone around the time of WWI, even though some currencies maintained their previous metal content. Ingrid 16:46, 29 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah. Before I started doing this project, I never consider the importance of metal content. I thought they were just boring numbers. But I was wrong. They actually tell a story. The funny thing about 5 LMUU is that you can actually tell that the Balkans are closer to A-H (either politically or monetarily) at that time. But I must go back to Malaysia and French Indochina. They've been here forever. I would need to do some stubs, splitting, and trace it all the way back to Mexican peso/Spanish dollar. --Chochopk 03:00, 30 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Table moved to User:Chochopk/Latin Monetary Union unit. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 08:12, 29 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Probably the easiest yet

Preceded by:
Currencies of the cantons
Reason: formation of the confederation (in 1948)
Ratio: 1 new franc = 1 French franc, and = 2/3 cantonal franc of many cantons
Currency of Switzerland
1850
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Austrian krone and Liechtenstein krone
Reason: Austrian krone was unstable
Ratio: at par with Swiss franc
Currency of Liechtenstein
1921
Concurrent with: Liechtenstein frank

This is the real where $1 = 8 real

Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Spain
? – 1808
Concurrent with: Spanish gold escudo
Succeeded by:
Spanish real de vellón
Ratio: 1 real de vellón = 0.4 real de plata fuerte
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Spain
? – 1850s
Concurrent with: Spanish real de plata fuerte before 1808, Spanish real de vellón after
Succeeded by:
Spanish real de vellón
Ratio: 1 real de vellón = 1/40 gold escudo

need to split Spanish real
It takes 20 of this reales to make $1. And yes they were available in 20R from 1809~1863.

Preceded by:
Spanish real de plata fuerte and Spanish gold escudo
Ratio: 1 real de vellón = 0.4 real de plata fuerte = 1/40 gold escudo
Currency of Spain
18081864
Concurrent with: gold escudo slowly withdrew until 1850s
Succeeded by:
Spanish silver escudo
Ratio: 1 silver escudo = 10 reales de vellón
Preceded by:
Spanish real de vellón
Ratio: 1 silver escudo = 10 reales de vellón
Currency of Spain
18641868
Succeeded by:
Spanish peseta
Reason: joining the Latin Monetary Union
Ratio: 1 peseta = 1 French franc = 0.4 silver escudo
Preceded by:
Spanish silver escudo
Reason: joining the Latin Monetary Union
Ratio: 1 peseta = 1 French franc = 0.4 silver escudo
Currency of Spain
1868January 1, 2002
Note: a virtual currency unit, European Currency Unit, was created in 1999
Succeeded by:
euro
Reason: creation of a monetary union
Ratio: 1 euro = 166.386 pesetas

Central Europe

edit
  • earliest note 1759
  • last (biligual) banknote in gulden: 1880
  • this is more confusing because Austria-Hungary didn't exist until 1867. From 1804-1867 it was the Austrian Empire. Before that, it was the Holy Roman Empire. But Dove1950 told me that the Holy Roman Empire didn't use the A-H gulden, just the South German gulden, and some other currencies. He's working on filling out the German currency situation. Ingrid 15:15, 6 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Preceded by:
??
Currency of Austria-Hungary, Liechtenstein
??? – ???
Succeeded by:
Austro-Hungarian krone
Ratio: 2 kronen = 1 gulden

Still having some trouble with this one. I've gotten this info out of GFD, and the details of the breakup of A-H from Wikipedia. There's a fair amount of information in the A-H krone article, but it doesn't exactly match this. I'm not sure if overstamping would constitute a new currency (I think GFD thinks it does, and that's what the Austrian krone, Hungarian koruna, and Czechoslovakian koruna are, but I don't really know). I'm getting really frustrated with this process because I don't know what to call the currencies. In this table, I've used basically the names from GFD (although they aren't consistent about adjectival forms). Ack. Any help is appreciated. Ingrid 04:26, 15 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The "Table of Monetary History" does not have one for Europe. So it's harder for us, I guess. And starting this is very dangerous, as it opens a doorway to the Balkans, which in turn leads to Ottoman Emmpire, which leads to its successors in the Middle East. Yet, this is a job we must do. And I have confidence that we will do a great job.
It is worth looking at Liechtenstein[dead link]. The 1920 notes were 10, 20, and 50 Heller.
The article of Austro-Hungarian krone is wrong. Austro-Hungarian krone is not succeeded by Austrian schilling--Chochopk 13:56, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think over stamp counts as a new currency, as it is the norm in the Standard Catalog. --Chochopk 15:11, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I updated the template instructions. Mostly just grammar, but I also took out your mention of how to handle if recognized independence is differnet from declared independence. Since we're dealing with currency, I don't think it matters what date independence happened -- usually, currency is introduced well after independence. Ingrid 22:32, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
As far as naming conventions for currencies, the project has chosen ISO 4217, and no one seems to care that that doesn't help us. So, I think it's reasonable for us to use the old style of <adjectival form of country name> <currency name>. When we need disambiguation, I think we should use (detail), for example, Cambodian riel (1955) and Cambodian riel (1980). It's not clear to me when it's appropriate to use new/old. I prefer to use whatever is on the currency itself, but that leads to problems because currencies often have "new" for a little while then drop it even though the currency hasn't changed. I do think it's important to use the same name in the succession box that we use in the article/label (see below).
Do you know what happened in Galicia when it became part of Poland? At the time, Poland used the Polish marka. GFD says that Poland (maybe just Galicia?) used the Austrian krone 1918-1919, but it doesn't include enough detail. I'm going to guess that it was just Galicia, unless you can figure out something better. Ingrid 22:32, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
See principle discussion above. --Chochopk 01:04, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What do you think about handling the Latin Monetary Union? GFD uses one code, and refers to Union Latine lira, Union Latine franc, etc. It makes sense to me that it's just one currency, but I'd rather have one name for it. The best I can think of is "Latin Union currency"
Unless the idea sounds bad to you, I'm thinking of creating a page for Latin Union currency which links to Latin Union and mentions how the currencies had different names and patterns, but were interchangeable and thus really one currency. Then, I'll link to the page from "Latin Union lira", "Latin Union franc", etc. with a reference on the "Italian lira", "French franc", etc. pages. Then, we can use "Latin Union lira" or LU whatever in our boxes. Sound reasonable? Ingrid 15:48, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Another issue: I just looked in SCWC (Standard Catalog of World Coins) and saw that the A-H krone was called "corona" on the Austrian coins. It was "koruna" on the Hungarian coins. I see (on the web) that the banknotes said "krone", I just found that odd, and will mention it in the updated article, whenever I update it. Ingrid 15:48, 18 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I started looking into Latin Union currency. It's fascinating. The only regret I have is not to have a coin catalog for 1800-1900. I'm for the new articles. --Chochopk 11:44, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I believe it would be better if we drop Latin Union lira and Romanian leu here. Territories are ceded from one country to another (existing one) all the time through out history. And it would be insane to include all those into the currency succession box. So IMHO, I think we only want to include the case where an entire country is occupied (e.g. Kuwait by Iraq), or a formation of a union with a newly acquired territory (e.g. Yugo), a split (N. and S. Korea), etc (did I include all appropriate changes?) --Chochopk 01:42, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I see your point, and agree that we could never reasonably expect to include all territory changes. But I think this is a different case, since Austria-Hungary ceased to exist. I think it deserves a mention where all the pieces went. A similar case (and one that I'm not exactly looking forward to, but at the same time, am interested in learning more about) would be Poland which has come and gone throughout history. A case that I wouldn't worry about is Alsace-Lorraine which has gone back and forth between Germany and France too many times to worry about. If you don't want to mess with it (I know, I started A-H when you wanted to leave Europe alone), just leave it for now, and I'll get back to it at some point. Ingrid 02:38, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Dear editors. The question of the succession boxes for Austria-Hungary is very interesting. As far as I know, after the dissolution of the Monarchy, 4 countries (Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Lichtenstein) were created on its territory without independent de jure precedessor; two countries (SHS kingdom, from 1929 Yugoslavia) were created on Kuk and other territories without de jure precedessor, while Romania and Italy were existing independent states awarded with Kuk territories.

All of these (be it newly created or independent before) used stamps to mark the banknotes on their territory - according to the treaties after the WWI, which forced the states to overstamp and then replace the banknotes circulating in their territory.

Some of the banknotes emitted by the still existing Austro-Hungarian Bank after the WWI were not accepted in some of the successor states. This was the first step which led to different inflations. The second step was the overstamping: if a country quickly overstemped the notes, it could deny in a short time the acception of non-overstamped money (and naturally the money of different states). If a country was late, the notes without stamp cumulated there, aggravating inflation (case of Hungary). As a third step, the new banknotes were introduced - the amount money depended only on the new states.

Austria, Hungary and Czechoslovakia (so the states fully created on the former Kuk territory) kept the earlier currency name (Krone, korona and koruna, respectively). However, the Krone and the korona was soon replaced with a new currency (Schilling and pengő), while the currency in Czechia and Slovakia is still the koruna...

Poland was created on the territory of Germany, Russia and A-H. The new money was named marka, but at least Kuk money was overstamped before replacing.

Hungary is a special case: the inner politics were extremely turbulent that time. The main aim of the first government (Károlyi) was to 'destruct' the army (which made it impossible to resist the Treaty decisions, which in the case of Turkey worked). The communists replaced this government in a short time, who reached some military success in the first time, but after 133 days' ruling, they were defied. - Due to the political uncertainty (vacuum), the currency system became very incalculable. Many local banks, towns, compounds and even newly created and unrecognised "republics" issued or overstamped money.

The Károlyi government asked the then-existing AH Bank to bring banknote press and clishé to print money in Budapest. Vienna sent the clishés of the 25 and 200 Kr bills, which were designed after the war and had a poor quality. However, the banknotes printed in Budapest were later declared forgeries by Vienna. This forced Hungary to stop the efflux of the old currency from the country and to replace the 25 and 200 kr. with new notes. These banknotes were emitted by the Post savings bank, and had the Kuk krone in deposit as their cover. In 1921 the korona state notes were printed, and the first 'real' banknotes were the pengő bills - emitted by the just-set-up Hungarian National Bank from 1927.

It is not easy to relate a currency to a time period. It is fact, that a 'korona' which was only legal tender only in Hungary, existed. But it is a good question, what should be the birthday of this currency.

Preceded by:
Austro-Hungarian gulden
Ratio: 2 kronen = 1 gulden
Note: This was called the florin in Austria and forint in Hungary
Currency of Austria-Hungary, Liechtenstein
18921918
Concurrent with: Liechtenstein krone in Liechtenstein since 1898
Succeeded by:
Austrian krone
Location: Austria and Galicia as part of Poland, Liechtenstein
Reason: dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Ratio: at par
Succeeded by:
Hungarian korona
Location: Hungary
Reason: dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Ratio: at par
Succeeded by:
Czechoslovak koruna
Location: Czechoslovakia
Reason: dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Ratio: at par
Note: on 10 April, 1919
Succeeded by:
Italian lira
Location: South Tyrol and Trieste
Reason: became part of Italy
Succeeded by:
Romanian leu
Location: Transylvania
Reason: became part of Romania
Succeeded by:
Yugoslav krone
Location: Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes
Reason: dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Note: overstamping of Austro-Hungarian krone on 12 November, 1918

Moved. --Chochopk 07:48, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What's listed on SCWPM:

  • Serbia
    • 1876 dinar (the last one before WW2 German occupation was dated 1918)
    • 1941 German occupation dinar (by Serbian National Bank) (1 note was overstamped Yugo note) (The last one was 1943)
  • Yugoslavia
    • Kingdom of the S, C, & S (as a subsection)
      • 1919 overstamped krone (on A-H krone)
      • 1919 dinar (by the Ministry of Finance of the Kingdom of the S, C, & S printed)
      • 1919 overstamped krone (on KSCS dinar)
        The ordering of these 1919 notes is unclear
      • 1920 dinar (by the National Bank of the KSCS)
    • Kingdom of Yugoslavia
      • 1929 dinar (the last one before German occupation was dated 1939)
      • 1943 kingdom in exile dinar
    • Hungarian occupation of Backa (WW2) (in today's northern Vojvodina, Serbia)
      • 1941 dinar (overstamp on Yugoslavian dinar)
    • Italian occupation of Montenegro (WW2)
      • 1941 dinar (overstamp on Yugoslavian dinar)
    • Democratic Federation of Yugoslavia
      • 1944 dinar
    • Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia
      • 1946 dinar
  • Croatia
    • (Revolution of) 1848 forint (extremely rare)
    • 1941 "Independent State of Croatia" kuna (Axis influence) (last one 1943)
  • Montenegro ("1 perper = 100 para = 1 Austrian crown")
    • Kingdom
      • 1912 perper (last 1914)
    • Austrian occupation (WW1)
      • 1916 perper (all overprint on older perper)
      • 1917 "convertible" perper, 2 perper = 1 munzperper = 1 krone

To Do:

Can I say Yugoslavia group is done for the part after 1990? --Chochopk 08:56, 27 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 11:11, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Note:

took out bons. Also, put back to three columns. Were you trying to split out the 91 and 92 dates? Since they were different dates within the year, it seems like it's better to just use "various dates" as we've done somewhere else. If you were trying to do something else, let me know. Ingrid 02:04, 27 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 11:11, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 11:11, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved --Chochopk 06:04, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

make a redirect?
Moved --Chochopk 06:04, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved --Chochopk 06:04, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved --Chochopk 05:21, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved --Chochopk 05:21, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Use dinara for plural (local name principle)?
Moved --Chochopk 20:01, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 08:32, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

There is an article Krajina reformed dinar (as of June 19, 2006, it redirects to Krajina dinar). This section simply copy-edited from Yugoslavia
Moved --Chochopk 20:01, 20 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Note for text on page:

  • This was originally the Austro-Hungarian krone overstamped with "DEUTSCHÖSTERREICH"
  • The Austrian National Bank began operations in 1923 (ref bank website)
  • Original schilling was overstamped on 10000 kronen note (at least there is one at banknoteworld). Late 1923 to late 1924 was a transitional period when krone and schilling existed together (not sure exactly when first schilling was produced, but it was authorized late 1923 -- see below).

changing date below from 1923 to 1924.

Preceded by:
Austro-Hungarian krone
Reason: Dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Ratio: at par
Currency of Austria
19181924
Succeeded by:
Austrian schilling
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 schilling = 10,000 kronen
Currency of Liechtenstein
19181921
Concurrent with: Liechtenstein krone (even before 1918)
Succeeded by:
Swiss franc and Liechtenstein frank
Reason: Austrian krone was unstable

Global Financial Data currency histories table[dead link]: 1.5 DER = 1 ATS
Austrian schilling: 1 Reichsmark to 1.5 Schillings
German Money in Austria 1938-1945, Germannotes: The Schilling was exchanged at a rate of 1 Reichsmark to 1.5 Schillings.
From the Schilling to the Euro, Oesterreichische Nationalbank[dead link]:Schillings were exchanged for reichsmarks at a rate of 1.5 schillings to the reichsmark, a populistic step representing a revaluation of the schilling.
Also, check this out [7]
Should I use schillings or schilling for plural? It look like schilling in German, but why does everyone say "schillings"?

Americans tend to adopt local names and then use -s for plural. I prefer using the local version of the plural, when known, especially since we don't translate the singular. Ingrid 03:58, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
More details about the switch from krone to schilling, from the national bank
  • Austrian national bank formed by law November 14, 1922, began operations January 2, 1923.
  • December 1923, authorized to issue kronen/schilling coins. (not sure exactly if these were krone or schilling or both as far as what was written on them -- I don't have my SCWC with me right now).
  • Schilling became official currency December 1924
  • First notes in 1925
It's interesting... SCWS says the last krone coin was in 1924, and the first groschen/schilling coins was in 1925. The 20 and 100 kronen coins in 1923 and 1924 had spec similar to the pre-inflation predecessors (gold), but the 100, 200, and 1000 kronen coins in 1923 and 1924 are similar to the 1, 2, 10 groschen coins later (1925).
There was a 10,000 kronen note dated Jan 2 1924 by Oesterreichische Nationalbank, it was available in its original form and overstamped form (as 1 schilling). It was the only overstamped schilling. Either version are inexpensive. There is another kronen by the same bank - 1 million kronen dated July 1 1924. It was probably not issued. First regular schilling note dated Jan 2 1925. --Chochopk 09:11, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Also, I took out the part about European Currency Unit which was created long before 1999. I replaced it with an explanation of why we use 2002 instead of 1999. It's too long, but I can't think of a shorter way to say it. Feel free to take it out. Ingrid 03:58, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 13:04, 14 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This succession box could be moved - only the proper dates are missing. I would choose 31 December 1926, since 1 January 1927 was the official date of obligatory switching to pengő in accounting marked by law. I know, it is not easy to mark one date: korona notes were overstamped from 25 August 1926, first pengő notes were first released into circulation on 27 December 1926 (somewhat like the euro coin beginner sets). Korona notes were withdrawn from circulation on 30 June 1927 (1 to 100 000 K) and on 30 June 1928 (500 000 and 1 million K). However, banknotes could be changed to pengő in the central bank until 30 June 1930 (30 June 1931 for 500 000 and 1 million K).

It is even more difficult to answer the question of the beginning date. After the first world war, the dissolution of the empire caused a chaotic monetary situation. In November, new states appeared and other territories were annexed into neighbouring countries. After November 1918, Austria-Hungary no longer existed (However, the borders and other statehood-related affairs were sanctified later by the Treaty of Saint-Germain and the Treaty of Trianon). It is more important that from 1 January 1919, the successor states were allowed to overstamp the Austro-Hungarian banknotes to limit their circulation only to their territory. However, the Austro-Hungarian Bank still functionated (until its final liquidation in 1922), and issued Austro-Hungarian Krone/korona notes - later issues (especially the 25 and 200 K bills) were not accepted in all successor states. Overstamped KuK banknotes circulated until 1924. Anyway, I would choose 1 Jan 1919 as beginning date.Timur lenk 23:54, 9 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

One more thing: the official reason of the introduction of the Hungarian korona was an obligation by the treaties after WWI. There was an attempt to preserve the common money after the dissolution of the Monarchy. This attempt faild: first, the neighbouring countries started to exchange the Krone/korona notes on the annexed territories for their own; second, the Treaty of Saint-Germain obligated all successor states to overstamp and then to replace the KuK currency.Timur lenk 00:04, 10 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Preceded by:
Austro-Hungarian krone
Reason: breakup of Austro-Hungarian Empire
Ratio: at par
Currency of Hungary
19181927
Note: korona notes overstamped to pengő in 1926 were not legally considered pengő
Succeeded by:
Hungarian pengő
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 pengő = 12,500 korona

These names come from GFD. Not sure if they should be changed.

I am not convinced that the adópengő (tax pengő) should be considered as a separate currency. Additionally, tax bills were not withdrawn as the forint was introduced on 1 August, 1946. The 10 000 000 adópengő bill was used as 5 fillér (0.05 forint) and the 100 000 000 adópengő bill as 50 fillér (0.50 forint) until 30 September in the forint circulation (1 forint was equal with 200 million adópengő). Pengő and adópengő were both used in 1946, but saying adópengő succeded pengő would not be correct: the value of adópengő was related to pengő daily. The reson for introducing the adópengő ("to stop people deferring tax") is incorrect. (See: Pengő#Tax bills)
Milpengő and B.-pengő are simply higher denominations of pengő. Mil- stands for millió (million or 1 000 000) and B.- for billió (1 000 000 000 000). It is like the 10 000 Portuguese escudos: on the banknotes it is designated as 10 mil escudos (where mil stands for thousand).
Bačka (Bácska) and Međimurje (Muraköz) should not be separated, since these territories were part of Hungary then (along with northern Transylvania and southern Slovakia).
So in my opinion, the correct succession box would be Hungarian korona -> Hungarian pengő -> Hungarian forint. And the only country where these three currencies were used is Hungary.

—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Timur lenk (talkcontribs) 16:07, 24 July 2006 (UTC)

Oh, I didn't know that adópengő still circulated some time after forint was introduced. I will correct the dates. But I think adópengő should be have its own succession box because it had "exchange rate" against pengő and other currencies. I will also correct the reason for the creation of adópengő.
As a rule to the succession box, "significant" occupation should be documented. And for every succeed relationship, there is a corresponding precede relationship. Yugoslavia did not exchange small chunk territory during WWII. Instead, it was partitioned completely. See Yugoslav dinar. So that why I put Bačka and Međimurje there. In fact I have plans to put southern Slovakia and Transylvania in the pengő box.
I will think of some way to represent the pengő-adópengő relationship later. I'm at work now.
--Chochopk 19:10, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't consider the pengo-adopengo issue (I'm trying not to jump back in -- too much real-life stuff to do), but I think this version of the box improves the occupation issue. Ingrid 18:26, 25 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, some specialists also consider "pengő and adópengő as simultaneously existing currencies, which cross-rate was estabilished by the government on a daily basis" (Rádóczi-Tasnádi: Hungarian Paper Money 1848-1992; Budapest, 1992). Howerver, I would not say that adópengő succeeded pengő, since both currencies existed at the same time (moreover, the value of the adópengő was determined in pengő!), and both were succeeded by the forint.
Like ECU existed together with the pre-Euro Western-European currencies as an account-money (and calculation basis), but it did not succeed any of them. And the Euro succeded all of these currencies.
I don't know how could this be incorporated into the succession box, though... --Timur lenk 23:40, 25 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

How's this now? --Chochopk 00:20, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Almost excellent!
Preceded by: Czechoslovak koruna, Location: southern Slovakia and Subcarpathia, Reason: First Vienna Award in 1938
Preceded by: Romanian leu, Location: Northern Transylvania, Reason: Second Vienna Award (1940)
Currency of Hungary: 1 January 1927 – 31 July 1946 (The Law No. XXXV of 1925 introduced pengő. From 25 August 1926, korona notes were overstamped to pengő denominations to facilitate the currency switch. The first pengő banknotes (5, 10, 20, 50, 100 P) were introduced on 27 December 1926. The obligatory accounting in pengő value came into power on 1 January 1927) German Reichsmark never acted as a currency in Hungary. The nazi-related issues are the Pengő series under the Szálasi government. Neither this, nor the Red Army issues should be separated from the "regular" pengő.
Succeeded by: Czechoslovak koruna, Location: southern Slovakia, Reason: Treaty of Paris
Succeeded by: Soviet ruble, Location: Subcarpathia, Reason: Treaty of Paris
Succeeded by: Romanian leu, Location: Northern Transylvania, Reason: Treaty of Paris
Adópengő was pegged to the pengő. It was withdrawn since the pengő was succeded by the forint, so a numerical basis for pengő calculations was no longer needed. However, the two highest denominations remained in circulation to facilitate the switch to the forint. No accounting was done in adópengő after the introduction of the forint. 1 January 1946 – 31 July 1946 (30 September 1946) would be the best date, but it is okay in its current form as well.--Timur lenk 16:38, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Trying the "Ethiopian birr model". How's this now? (I would really like to make use of the start and end attributes of the middle column). Adópengő also improved. So if overstamped pengő existed since 25 August 1926, then that should be the start date. We (well, just the two editors here) generally use the date of physical currency, and add extra explanation if necessary. Examples include Somali shilling and pre-euro currencies under construction here. --Chochopk 06:19, 28 July 2006 (UTC).[reply]
Did you mean Hungarian korona overstamped to pengő? However, this doesn't mean that the banknotes became pengő bills. Unlike the case of the successor states of Austria-Hungary (or Czechoslovakia), the overstamping of the banknotes had been executed only to show their denomination in pengő to make calculations (and thus the currency switch) easier, but "pengő" was not used as an accounting subject (while after the split of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the banknotes overstamped by the successor states became new currencies: Czech koruna and Slovak koruna, respectively). So the firstday of pengő in circulation was 27 Dec, and the official introduction day was 1 Jan. I prefer the latter, but you know. It should be consistent with the other succession boxes, so you decide it. And the above details can be written in the pengő article.
Not only the southern part but the whole Subcarpathia (today's Zakarpatskaya oblast') became part of Hungary.--Timur lenk 08:04, 28 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Checking in a little late, but I like this version! I wonder if there's some way we can visually indicate that all of these boxes relate to one nation.... Perhaps a different line style, like a dashed line between them. I think that's pretty tricky to implement though. I'll give it some more thought. If either of you have an idea, I'll try to update the templates to make it happen. Ingrid 21:19, 29 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

So we have two styles here (crap!) So I revisited those and thought about why they were done in the way they were done

1 long cell (rowspan>1)

It was the currency of a unified Germany from 1990-2001
It was also the currency of West Germany before
It was the currency of the then unified Somalia 1962-1991
It was the currency of a smaller Somalia after 1991 and "independent" Somaliland from 1991-1994 (a reversal situation of German Mark?)

many individual cells (rowspan=1)

Even though today's Eritrea was part of Ethiopia before 1993, the start date of Ethiopian birr wasn't really in sync with the rest of Ethiopia.
  • Pengő here
Start and end date for these different parts during WWII are all different, and different from Hungary proper of course
  • German Reichmark here
Same reason as pengő

So by reverse engineering, using Germak mark-Somali shilling model requires at either start date or end date to be the same for the different locations. And birr, pengő, and Reichmark all fail that requirement. But I think dotted line is the way to do. I will take up that responsibility. --Chochopk 10:40, 2 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Dotted line implemented. What about putting "(As part of xyz)" as a template parameter, and make it non-bolded? --Chochopk 07:22, 7 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It doesn't jump out as much as I'd like. What do you think about taking the line out completely? Perhaps it would be enough then to say "Currency of <region>" but maybe it should still say as "(as part of <country>". I agree it should be a template parameter. Non-bold sounds fine, if it looks good to you. Can you tell I'm not feeling decisive tonight? Ingrid 02:01, 9 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the best would be if the lines were be removed. The box should show that the money was used only in one country (Hungary) and the changes in the territories where it was accepted is alway in correspondence with the territorial changes of Hungary.Timur lenk 00:21, 10 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

If you don't mind, I move this succession box to Hungarian pengő. I don't think it can be professionalized any more and, indeed, there was no change in it for several months. I set the date of introduction 1 January 1927, since this is written in the law. Anyways, further changes are still possible on the pengő article. Timur lenk 19:07, 13 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Hungarian milpengő

edit

redirect to pengő Ingrid 02:44, 7 February 2006 (UTC) merged with pengő --Chochopk 13:02, 23 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hungarian bilpengő

edit

redirect to pengő. GFD says 400,000,000, but Hungarian pengő says 4 x 10 29 pengő (4 x 1017 bilpengő). I'm having trouble finding another source. Ingrid 02:44, 7 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

merged with pengő --Chochopk 13:02, 23 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Hungarian forint

edit

I think this succession box can be moved to the forint article.--Timur lenk 21:22, 28 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved with Timur lenk's blessing. --Chochopk 22:42, 28 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Pre-WWII
Preceded by:
Czechoslovak koruna
Reason: dissolution of the Empire after World War I
Ratio: at par
Currency of Czechoslovakia
19191938 or 1939
Succeeded by:
Bohemian and Moravian koruna
Location: Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
Reason: fill in
Note: in 1939
Succeeded by:
German reichsmark
Location: Sudetenland
Reason: German annexation
Note: in 1938
Succeeded by:
Slovak koruna
Location: Slovak Republic (WWII)
Reason: fill in
Note: in 1939
Succeeded by:
Hungarian pengő
Location: southern Slovakia and Subcarpathia
Reason: First Vienna Award
Note: in 1938
Post-WWII
Preceded by:
Bohemian and Moravian koruna
Location: Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
Reason: reunification of Czechoslovakia as a result of World War II and end of German occupation
Ratio: at par
Currency of Czechoslovakia
1 November 194531 December 1992
Currency of Czech Republic
1 January 19937 February 1993
Succeeded by:
Czech koruna
Reason: breakup of Czechoslovakia
Preceded by:
German reichsmark
Location: Sudetenland
Reason: reunification of Czechoslovakia as a result of World War II and end of German occupation
Preceded by:
Slovak koruna
Location: Slovak Republic (WWII)
Reason: reunification of Czechoslovakia as a result of World War II and end of German occupation
Ratio: at par
Currency of Slovakia
1 January 19937 February 1993
Succeeded by:
Slovak koruna
Reason: breakup of Czechoslovakia
Preceded by:
Hungarian pengő
Location: southern Slovakia
Reason: reunification of Czechoslovakia as a result of World War II and end of Hungarian occupation

I just realized that there's no succession box on the Slovak koruna page. I think the present and the WWII Slovak koruna should be separated into different articles. Only the name is similar. The disambiguation site (koruna) would help.

There's info on the printer of the banknotes on the National Bank hompage:

Printers:

  • BA Banknote (Canada)
  • Thomas De La Rue (Great Britain)
  • Giesecke & Devrient (Germany)
  • Oesterreichische Banknoten und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH (Austria)
  • François-Charles Oberthur Fiduciaire (France)
  • Polska Wytwórnia Papierow Wartosciowych (Poland)

The corresponding websites:

  • www.babanknote.com
  • www.delarue.com
  • www.gi-de.com
  • www.oebs.at
  • www.oberthur.com
  • www.pwpw.pl

I don't know how to add multiply printers and the related websites.Timur lenk 19:48, 12 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I know Slovak koruna is tricky. I received some opposition when I merged them. Anyway, do you mean you don't know how to add multiple printers in infobox? --Chochopk 22:42, 12 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, it would be great if you helped. I understand that you merged the two articles, both were short and it is still very short - and later, if it is expanded, it can be divided into two articles again. In my opinion, the best would be the "one monetary system - one article", so there should be an article on Romanian Leu and Romanian New Leu (2005), Polish złoty (1950) and Polish złoty (1995), and Soviet ruble, Russian ruble (1993) and Russian ruble (1997) and so on. I think, this is logic: in 1 Jan 1927 Hungary changed Hungarian korona to Hungarian pengő at 1:12 500; in 1 Jan 1995 Poland changed from Polish złoty (1950) to Polish złoty (1995) at 1:10 000; in 1997 Russia changed from Russian ruble (1993) to Russian ruble (1997) at 1:1000. The only difference: Hungary changed the money name while the latter two countries did not.
To help those who seek info on the monetary system of a country, there should be articles like Hungarian money or Money of Hungary etc. And who search info on ruble, there should be a disambiguation site for ruble.Timur lenk 11:34, 13 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Slovak koruna
Preceded by:
Czechoslovak koruna
Reason: breakup of Czechoslovakia
Ratio: at par
Currency of Slovakia
8 February 1993
Succeeded by:
Current

Germany

edit

History of German Money and Economy
It's not that bad...... unlike people's impression. Plus, we have the experience of Yemen and Vietnam (and Korea to some extent). --Chochopk 09:00, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I am not sure if it's correct to separate German papiermark with German gold mark. The German gold mark became the papiermark because it lost its link to precious metal.

Google translation: pension Mark
The article is wrong
Only one source has an end date for rentenmark (GFD: 1939) (last banknote dated 1937) (last coin, which I could only find rentenpfennig, 1936)
How should we handle this concurrent currency situation? (neither the start nor the end dates are the same)

Moved. --Chochopk 05:35, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

In my opinion, reichmark was not the currency of Austria between 1938 and 1945, since there was no such country then. The same situation in the case of Danzig and Germany occupied portion of Slovenia. These territories became part of Germany, so Reichmark was circulating in Germany then. This format would be only correct, if - say - Austria adopted the Reichmark while remaining an independent or at least autonomous country (like the case of the DM and Montenegro).--Timur lenk 17:22, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What about using the Ethiopian birr model? I believe many would consider it "occupation" therefore not "legit". --Chochopk 06:19, 28 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Wow, we shouldn't go into the question of legitimacy... especially when it is revised later (like the statehood of WWII Slovakia). In Austria, there was German administration during the WWII, so we can't say that reichmark was the currency of Austria. But this way it is good ("Germany occupied" or "as part of Germany").
I know, it would sound better to say "Reichmark was the currency of the Republic of Austria due to temporary German occupation", but it is not correct, since no such state "Republic of Austria" existed during that time. It is a little bit similar to the case of Ukraine and Belarus: both countries enjoyed somewhat autonomy in the Soviet Union, furthermore, both countries are original members of the UN (i.e., from 1945!). However, saying that the Soviet ruble was the currency of Ukraine before 1991 would be true but somewhat misleading: it was the currency of the whole Soviet Union, since Ukraine did not exist as an independent state before the dissolution of the CCCP.
All in all, I would say: Reichmark was the currency of Germany between 1924-1948. Territorial changes should be mentioned in the article or in a corresponding history article. --86.101.173.69 22:30, 28 July 2006 (UTC)--Timur lenk 22:31, 28 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

imperial Mark
probably the wierdest conversion ratio with its successors

Preceded by:
German rentenmark
Ratio: at par, and 4.2 reichsmark = US$1
Currency of Germany
30 August 19241948
Concurrent with: German rentenmark
Succeeded by:
East German mark
Reason: reaction to the change over in Trizone (later West Germany)
Ratio: 1 kuponmark = 7 reichsmark on the first 70 reichsmark for private individuals, otherwise 1 kuponmark = 10 reichsmark
Succeeded by:
(West) German mark
Reason: intended to protect West Germany from the second wave of hyperinflation and stop the rampant barter and black market trade
Ratio: 1 mark = 10 reichsmark, and each person received 40 mark
Preceded by:
Danzig gulden
Reason: Free City's Nazi government voted for re-unification
Currency of Danzig (as part of Germany)
19391945
Succeeded by:
Polish złoty
Reason: became part of Poland as a result of World War II and end of German occupation
Preceded by:
Czechoslovak koruna
Reason: German annexation
Currency of Sudetenland (as part of Germany)
19381945
Succeeded by:
Czechoslovak koruna
Reason: reunification of Czechoslovakia as a result of World War II and end of German occupation
Preceded by:
Austrian (old) Schilling
Reason: German annexation (anschluss)
Ratio: 1 reichsmark = 1.5 Schilling
Currency of Austria (as part of Germany)
19381945
Succeeded by:
Austrian allied military Schilling
Reason: restoration of sovereignty, under allied occupation
Ratio: at par, limited to 150 Schilling per person
Preceded by:
Yugoslav 1920 dinar
Reason: German occupation
Currency of Germany occupied portion of Slovenia
19411945
Note: not as a separate protectorate/colony
Succeeded by:
Yugoslav 1945 dinar
Reason: Reunification of Yugoslavia as a result of World War II and end of German occupation

Moved. --Chochopk 05:35, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 05:35, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Malaysia

edit

Sigh... I cannot sit and guess from some obscure sources. I just bought a coin catalog for the 19th century, as banknote data are less meaningful then. I can't believe I'm spending more than $40 for this project. =) --Chochopk 17:23, 30 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • First note 1898
  • First coin by East India Company 1845 (in cent). Cent was not a subunit of rupee. Catalog says the company rules from 1826-1858
  • First coin British India 1862 (in cent). as part of British India from 1858-1867
  • First coin by Straits Settlement 1871. As a British colony from 1867-1939. Weird, no dollar coins. 20 cents have spec close to LMUU.
  • TMMH: before 1867, used Mexican and Spanish silver piasters (pesos, dollars) and Indian silver rupee
  • TMMH: starting from 1867, used Straits dollar
  • GDF: The East Indies Company Dollar (XEID) was used in Malaysia from 1788 to 1858, and became the predecessor to the Straits Settlement Dollar (STSD), which replaced it at par in 1858.
Why is everyone telling a different story. --Chochopk 10:12, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
After careful consideration, I started to think if we should just simply drop some of those boxes for the more obscure currencies. Better nothing than wrong. --Chochopk 18:20, 5 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
East India Company dollar
Preceded by:
Mexican peso, Spanish dollar
Ratio: at par
Currency of Straits Settlements as part of British India
18451862
Succeeded by:
British Indian Straits dollar
Ratio: at par
British Indian Straits dollar
Preceded by:
East India Company dollar
Ratio: at par
Currency of Straits Settlements as part of British India
18621867
Concurrent with: Mexican peso, Spanish dollar
Currency of Straits Settlements
18671871
Concurrent with: Mexican peso, Spanish dollar
Succeeded by:
Straits dollar
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
No modern predecessor
Currency of Brunei
? – 1971
Concurrent with: Mexican peso, Spanish dollar
Preceded by:
British Indian Straits dollar
Ratio: at par
Currency of Straits Settlements, Brunei
18711939
Concurrent with: Mexican peso, Spanish dollar. It is unclear when these foreign currencies phased out.
Succeeded by:
Malayan dollar
Ratio: at par, or 60 dollars = 7 British pounds

Moved. --Chochopk 14:36, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 14:36, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Both GFD and TABLES OF MODERN MONETARY HISTORY say 1938 was the year SS$ was replaced, and 1952 was the year the common Board Commissioners were created. The date 1940 and 1953 are obtained from the Standard Catalog. I must wait for catalog of coins to do more verifications.
first malayan coin = 1939
Todo: add Japanese occupation money
What's the best way to name these Japanese occupation money? English is not my first language. Help needed!
Please note that I added "at par, or 60 dollars = 7 British pounds", how's that? --Chochopk 12:35, 16 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not sure how to name the occupation money. Was it specific to each area? That is, was there a Japanese occupation dollar specifically for Malaya? If so, I think what you have, "Japanese occupation Malayan dollar" is fine. GFD uses "Malaya gumpyo dollar" (also military yen). I don't know what gumpyo means. GFD also doesn't destinguish pre-war and post-war Malayan dollar.
By the way, I'm very impressed by anyone who can speak more than one language (it's a goal of mine, but I've never devoted enough effort to it). So, if you ever want me to proofread something, just ask. Ingrid 00:54, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
These occupation money are country specific. They replaced Malayan dollar, Philippine peso, or some other local currencies at par respectively. Gumpyo means "military note". It should like like 軍票 (But I'm typing in Chinese, not sure if the Japanese form is identical. I'll look up the images when I get home.)

Moved. --Chochopk 14:36, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What about "common name" principle on Singapore dollar?

My understanding is that common name applies to page names, and I'm not recommending we change those. I'm a big fan of consistency, and common names are not always consistent. I'd like to use <adj country> <local denom> in these boxes consistently, but I recognize that I do not own the boxes, and don't necessarily get to make that decision. I switched Tanzanian shilling to Tanzanian shilingi for that reason, even though I'm sure it's not commonly known as that. I think that once you start translating currencies, you can get into a mess (dollar comes to mind -- is a yen a dollar? Is a tolar or thaler a dollar? Is a peso a dollar? Or is a dollar a thaler?). So, that's why I'd like to do it this way, but I'm open to your (and everyone else's) opinions. Another potential problem is that when you're dealing with historical currencies, they don't necessarily have common names (that are easy to determine anyway). Pound sterling is another one that drives me crazy. I understand that that's how it's commonly known, but I wasn't aware of that (since I'm not dealing with currency traders or anything), and I think British pound is more clear. Ingrid 02:22, 23 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

sources:

Moved. --Chochopk 05:49, 11 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

These are trivial, but must be done.

Moved. --Chochopk 05:49, 11 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 05:49, 11 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Moved. --Chochopk 05:49, 11 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

French Indochina

edit

I'm trying to review this section (finally), and am very confused. Maybe it's just because I'm tired. I'll come back to it some other time. For now though a couple of things:

  • both GFD and TMMH call the North Vietnamese currency "piastre dong viet", not just dong. SCWC just calls it "dong".
  • SCWC has South Vietnamese su/xu from 1953. The dong weren't until 1960 (later dates don't bother me, but why would there be 1953 when South Vietnam didn't exist yet). Ingrid 03:31, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I believe the name piastre dong viet is just a mix up. I never see piastre with dong on banknotes. You probably know this already: Su/xu is a subunit. 1 dong = 10 hao = 100 xu. I don't know why there are South Vietnamese coins in 1953. Perhaps they are not released until 1955? --Chochopk 14:15, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

French Indochinese piastre

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moved to French Indochinese piastre. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 07:58, 25 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Lao kip

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Moved to Lao kip. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 06:47, 25 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Cambodian riel

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moved to Cambodian riel --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 08:03, 24 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

North Vietnamese đồng

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moved to North Vietnamese đồng. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 04:38, 24 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

South Vietnamese đồng

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Moved to South Vietnamese đồng. --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 03:51, 24 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Vietnamese đồng

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moved to Vietnamese đồng --ChoChoPK (球球PK) (talk | contrib) 04:07, 24 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Korea

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moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This was a very obscure currency moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What is this?
I'll just consider this North Korean won

moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

moved. --Chochopk 09:00, 22 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Although I would love to get some of these boxes onto the real pages, I am so distracted by other projects. One of which is a naming convention for currency articles. For that, it would be good to know how many CFA francs there are, so I'm going to work on something new (as if I wasn't distracted enough already). Ingrid 02:46, 9 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Dates of joining FWA according to GFD:

Some of this is more confusing because of name changes and reorganizations within FWA which I need to research some more. Note that FEA did not have a CFA franc until 1945

Preceded by:
various, including Maria Theresa thaler and cowrie shells -- needs more work
Currency of French West Africa
(Dahomey, Upper Volta, Côte D'Ivoire, French Sudan, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Togo)
18951941
Concurrent with: French franc
Note: various dates of joining French West Africa
Succeeded by:
French West African CFA franc
Currency of French Equatorial Africa
(French Cameroun, Oubangui-Chari, Chad, Middle Congo,)
19101941
Succeeded by:
French Equatorial African franc
Preceded by:
French West African franc
Currency of French West Africa
(Dahomey, Upper Volta, Côte D'Ivoire, French Sudan, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Togo)
19411958
Note: Togo became independent in 1956 but continued to use the same currency
Succeeded by:
West African CFA franc
  • also known as CFA franc BCEAO
  • The situation with how these states were/are associated is (as I remember) complicated. I'll look into it some more before we go live. Ingrid 01:17, 3 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Preceded by:
Guinea Bissau peso
Ratio: 1 franc = 65 pesos
Currency of Guinea Bissau
1997
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
French West African CFA franc
Ratio: at par???
Currency of Dahomey
19581975
Currency of Benin
1975
Currency of Upper Volta
19581984
Currency of Burkina Faso
1984
Currency of Niger
1958
Currency of Togo
1958
Currency of Mauritania
19581973
Succeeded by:
Mauritanian ouguiya
Ratio: 1 ouguiya = 5 francs
Currency of Guinea
19581959 or 1960??
Succeeded by:
(First) Guinean franc
Ratio: need to look up
Currency of Sudanese Republic
19581959
Currency of Mali Federation
19591960
Currency of Republic of Mali
19601962
Succeeded by:
Malian franc
Currency of Senegal
19581959
Currency of Republic of Senegal
1960
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Malian franc
Currency of Republic of Mali
1964

above are Western


below are Equatorial/Central

GFD does not show this progression for French Cameroun, just the others. For FC, they show straight to CFA franc BCEAEC. I'm guessing it didn't come around until 1958 with independence, as GFD shows for other FEA states. Need to verify.

Preceded by:
French West African franc
Currency of French Equatorial Africa
(French Cameroun, Oubangui-Chari, Chad, Middle Congo,)
19411945
Succeeded by:
French Equatorial African CFA franc
Preceded by:
French Equatorial African franc
Currency of French Equatorial Africa
(French Cameroun, Oubangui-Chari, Chad, Middle Congo,)
19451958
Succeeded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Note: Oubangui-Chari became Central African Republic
Middle Congo became Central African Republic

Is there a better name for this? BCEAEC is Equatorial Africa and Cameroon (need to check if I've included Cameroon in EA elsewhere, and figure out if it's ever been considered part of EA). Ingrid 01:30, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Preceded by:
French Equatorial African franc
Note: Oubangui-Chari became Central African Republic
Middle Congo became Republic of the Congo
Currency of Central African States
(French Cameroun/Cameroon (1960), Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo,)
19581973
Succeeded by:
Cameroonian CFA franc then Cameroonian CFA franc BEAC
Location: Cameroon
Note: Cameroon used the Cameroonian CFA franc from 1961 to 1962 and then returned to using the CFA franc BCEAEC.
In 1973, Cameroon began using the Cameroonian CFA franc BEAC
Succeeded by:
Central African Republic CFA franc
Location: Central African Republic
Succeeded by:
Chadian CFA franc
Location: Chad
Succeeded by:
Congolese CFA franc
Location: Republic of the Congo

One for each country? Is it because they have different design? --Chochopk 04:35, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not sure. I'm going by GFD for now, and haven't looked at TMMH or SCWC or anywhere else. I'm guessing it might have been a step towards currency independence, but then they went back to a joint currency, but that's just a guess. GFD gives separate 3-letter codes (I think all their 3-letter codes come from ISO, but am not sure). Ingrid 03:10, 19 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Preceded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Location: Republic of Cameroon
(formerly French Cameroun)

Reason: formation of federation
Currency of Federal Republic of Cameroon
19611962
Succeeded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Preceded by:
British West African pound
Location: Southern British Cameroon
Reason: formation of federation

This one looks less like an independent currency in GFD. The code is XAF-E, which makes me think it may just be a different design, but the same currency. It's hard to say exactly what makes a separate currency. If it's pegged (which all of these seem to be), it could be argued it's not its own currency. But if circulation is limited to a single area, I think it's fair to call it an independent currency. But that's just my opinion. I'm sure there's some official definition somewhere that I'm not aware of.

Preceded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Currency of Cameroon
1973December 31, 1992
Succeeded by:
Central African CFA franc
Preceded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Currency of Central African Republic
1973December 31, 1992
Succeeded by:
Central African CFA franc
Preceded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Currency of Chad
1973December 31, 1992
Succeeded by:
Central African CFA franc
Preceded by:
CFA franc BCEAEC
Currency of Republic of the Congo
1973December 31, 1992
Succeeded by:
Central African CFA franc
Preceded by:
Cameroon CFA franc BEAC
Currency of Central African States
(Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo,)
1993
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Central African Republic CFA franc
Preceded by:
Chadian CFA franc
Preceded by:
Congolese CFA franc
  • GFD is not clear on what Comoros used 1963-1975. It says Madagascar and Comoros franc.
  • Madagascar used its own franc starting 1963. GFD doesn't call it a CFA franc, but CFA franc says Madagascar left CFA zone in 73 (not 63).
  • Comorian franc (http://www.dictionary.com says it's Comoran, ISO says Comoro) has dates that don't match GFD. Haven't checked TMMH yet.
  • http://www.banknoteworld.com does not have any notes for Comoros during the 64-75 period.

Need to do some more research Ingrid 00:44, 12 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • TMMH says that Comoros had its own CFA franc, issued in Madagascar still, but overstamped "Comores". But they also say that the CFA franc was created in 1945 (not 1941 which is what GFD says)

I just discovered this discussion. I'm the one who wrote the Comorian franc article. I was involved in its devaluation in 1994 of the CFA and Comorian francs, so I know a little about the subject, but only a little. First, let's address the Comoran vs. Comorian debate. This was debated earlier. Check here: Wikipedia:Categories for deletion/Log/2005 August 23#Comoran. I think the most authoritative source would be the Banque de France. In their English language sections on their website, they use "Comorian". I've linked to those at the bottom of the Comorian article. Britannica and the US State department use "Comorian". But Comoran is widespread. I heard it a month ago on PBS documentary about the Coelacanth.

I've also tried to figure out the history of the Franc Zone. It isn't easy. And I tried my old contacts at the IMF. Didn't help. From what I remember, GFD has the general idea right. When the CFA got going, everything was run by the French out of Paris. The former colonies were divided into six administrative divisions, but the distinctions didn't matter so much when it was all run in Paris. Over time, responsibilities were handed over to the locals. The core of the CFA is the cooperation treaty between franc and Africa. I've covered some of that in the Monetary Cooperation section of the Comorian franc article. The two arrangements are nearly identical, so what goes for CFA goes for Comoros.

It may not be a contradiction to say that Madagascar issued its own franc in 1963, but left CFA in 1973. Just because Madagascar took on the responsibility of issuing the currency, does not mean that it abandoned the CFA treaty. The central point of the treaty is for the African countries to keep their foreign exchange reserves at the Bank of France. When the CFA treaty was put into place, there weren't even central banks in Africa. The African countries took on more responsibilities over time, including issuing the currency. But the Banque de France still guarantees the currency.

I've put in the reference a book on the Comorian franc. I've got it on good authority that it's an excellent book and completely reliable. Unfortunately, it's only available in French, and my French just isn't good enough when it comes to technical matters. Also, the Central Bank of Comoros now has a web site, also in French. I put the link on the article. Perhaps someone fluent in French can check these resources? I'll be happy to buy the book if someone will help me read it.

I think a good place to start with all this is the history of the CFA. We need information on how it was originally managed by the French, and how and when functions were delegated to the former colonies. I'm sure the establishment of the central banks came much later than 1945. If we had this history, it would greatly improve the CFA franc article as well as answer the questions about Madagascar, Djibouti and even Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, which was also at one time part of CFA.

I hope this helps. I have a fair amount of confidence in the history that I wrote for the Comorian franc. But my sources did disagree. That's why I put a flag on it asking for help. Also, a big question: What's TMMH?

Any comments? Am I completely off base? Thanks. SDC 07:43, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I appreciate your help and input. I am not an expert on the situation at all. Just a coin collector with an interest in currency succession. I'm using mainly web sources (GFD and TMMH = Tables of Modern Monetary History -- see #Useful sources for a link to the website). I also use the SCWC (Standard Catalog of World Coins), and Chochopk has the SCWPM (Standard Catalog of World Paper Money), and he's also great at finding other web sources. This project got so consuming for me that I had to take a little break. I'd like to come back to it, but have trouble finding more than a couple of minutes here and there (speaking of which, I have to go now). I speak just enough French to get really frustrated when I can't actually read something (which is usually), and the few web sources I've found about the CFA franc are in French. Ingrid 15:37, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Preceded by:
Madagascan franc
Currency of Madagascar and Comoros
19451975
Succeeded by:
Comorian franc
Location: Comoros
Succeeded by:
Madagascan franc
Location: Madagascar

Note:It's not clear to me whether this should be called Djibouti or French Somaliland. The notes I saw at banknoteworld said Djibouti, but other sources say it was called "French Somaliland" then. Ingrid 01:49, 6 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Status

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Some may be left out because of a Wikipedia bug (What links here does not show complete list anymore)

Priority items

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  • Ottoman related (higher priority than CFA franc, since Ottoman currency mingles with the Balkans)
  • CFA franc
  • Australian dollar and some former British colonies in the Pacific

(avoid Europe or the Americas if possible because there is no "TABLES OF MODERN MONETARY HISTORY")

  • recently redenominated currencies (Turkish new lira and Romanian leu) to increase the awareness of the succession box
  • removing old succession boxes

Using new boxes

edit

reviewed

edit
Rhodesia
edit

all have sources (I changed the display of these links. They look like Tables of Modern Monetary History: Africa[dead link] --Chochopk 11:05, 19 January 2006 (UTC))[reply]

Southern Africa
edit
Eastern Africa
edit
Taiwan
edit
Malaysia
edit
Korea
edit

(below may not have sources linked yet)

Chile
edit

not reviewed

edit
Central Europe
edit
Germany
edit
Balkans
edit
Chile
edit
Africa
edit
Middle East
edit

Using old boxes

edit

Africa

edit

Euro

edit
German
edit

Asian Pacific

edit
  • Australian pound (it uses the new box, but is created by an IP user. Probably need to add many Pacific Islander nations)
Preceded by:
French franc, Maria Theresa thaler, Indian rupee
Currency of Djibouti
19071945
Concurrent with: French franc, Maria Theresa thaler, Indian rupee
Succeeded by:
Djiboutian CFA franc