Crown (currency)
The crown is a monetary unit (currency) used in the countries of Czech Republic, Denmark (including the territories of Faroe Islands and Greenland), Iceland, Norway and Sweden. It was formerly also used by Slovakia and Estonia until 2009 and 2011, respectively.[1]
Alternative names
The names are derived from the Latin word corona ("crown"). The symbol of crown is usually "kr". Some countries use another symbol for it like Íkr, -, Kč. Various names for crown depend on official language of country:
Current use
Historical use
- Estonian: kroon
- German: Krone (capital letter k)
- Hungarian: korona
- Slovak: koruna
Current use of a currency called crown
Country | Currency | ISO 4217 code | Date Established | Preceding Currency(ies) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Czech Republic | Czech koruna | CZK | 8 February 1993 | Czechoslovak koruna |
Denmark (and Greenland) | Danish krone | DKK | 1 January 1875[2] | Danish rigsdaler |
Faroe Islands | Faroese króna | None (DKK) | 31 May 1940 | Danish krone |
Iceland | Icelandic króna | ISK | 1885 | Danish krone |
Norway and dependencies | Norwegian krone | NOK | 1873 | Norwegian speciedaler |
Sweden | Swedish krona | SEK | 1873 | Swedish riksdaler |
Historical use of a currency called crown
Country | Currency | Period | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Austria | Austrian Krone | 1918-1925 | Replaced by Austrian Schilling. |
Austria-Hungary | Austro-Hungarian crown | 1892-1918 | Replaced by Austrian Krone and Hungarian korona. |
Czechoslovakia | Czechoslovak crown | 1919-1939; 1945-1993 | Replaced by Czech koruna and Slovak koruna. |
Estonia | Estonian kroon | 1928-1940; 1992-2011 | Soviet ruble used in-between. Replaced by euro. |
Hungary | Hungarian crown | 1919-1926 | Abandoned due to inflation. Replaced by Hungarian pengő. |
Slovakia | Slovak crown | 1939-1945; 1993-2008 | Replaced by euro. |
See also
References
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.