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Czechoslovak koruna

Czechoslovak koruna
koruna československá (Czech & Slovak)
One Czechoslovak Crown.png
One Crown of the First Czechoslovak Republic.
ISO 4217
Code CSK
Number 200
Denominations
Subunit
 1/100 haléř  (Czech)
halier  (Slovak)
Plural The language(s) of this currency belong(s) to the Slavic languages. There is more than one way to construct plural forms.
Symbol Kčs
Banknotes
 Freq. used 10, 20, 50, 100 Kčs
 Rarely used 1000 Kčs
Coins
 Freq. used 10, 20, 50 h; 1, 2, 5 Kčs
 Rarely used 5, 25 h, 3, 10 Kčs
Demographics
User(s)
Issuance
Central bank State Bank of Czechoslovakia
Printer Státní tiskárna cenin
(State Securities Printer, Prague)
 Website www.stc.cz
Mint Mincovňa Kremnica
(Kremnica Mint)
 Website www.mint.sk
Valuation
Inflation 57.9%
 Source World Bank, 1991
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

The Czechoslovak koruna (in Czech and Slovak: Koruna československá, at times Koruna česko-slovenská; koruna means crown) was the currency of Czechoslovakia from April 10, 1919, to March 14, 1939, and from November 1, 1945, to February 7, 1993. For a brief time in 1939 and 1993, it was also the currency in separate Czech and Slovak republics.

On February 8, 1993, it was replaced by the Czech koruna and the Slovak koruna, both at par.

The (last) ISO 4217 code and the local abbreviations for the koruna were CSK and Kčs. One koruna equalled 100 haléřů (Czech, singular: haléř) or halierov (Slovak, singular: halier). In both languages, the abbreviation h was used. The abbreviation was placed behind the numeric value.

A currency called the krone in German and koruna in Czech was introduced in Austria-Hungary on 11 September 1892, as the first modern gold-based currency in the area. After the creation of an independent Czechoslovakia in 1918, an urgent need emerged for the establishment of a new currency system that would distinguish itself from the currencies of the other newly born countries suffering from inflation. The next year, on 10 April 1919, a currency reform took place, defining the new koruna as equal in value to the Austro-Hungarian krone. The first banknotes came into circulation the same year, the coins three years later, in 1922.

This first koruna circulated until 1939, when separate currencies for Bohemia and Moravia and Slovakia were introduced, at par with the Czechoslovak koruna. These were the Bohemian and Moravian koruna and the Slovak koruna.


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