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DenmarkCourant
Ducat; Daler; Daler Specie; Denning; Drelling; Ducat; Ducat Courant; Ducat
Specie; Frederik d'Or; Gold Crown; Gulden; Huid; Krone; Kroner; Mark; Ore;
Pfenning; Piastre; Portugaloser; Rigsbankdaler; Rigsbankskilling; Rigsdaler;
Rigsmontskilling; Rose Noble; Schilling; Sechsling; Skilling; Soldi; Solido;
Sosling; Specie Daler; Specie Ducat; Specie Thaler Greenland
Ore; Piastre
The krone is the currency of Denmark, including the
autonomous provinces of Greenland and the Faroe Islands.
In the eighteen century the National Bank introduced denominations of 10, 50, 100 and
500 kroner followed by 5 kroner. From 1891, a number of
private banks issued notes, including the Aalborg Kreditbank, the Aarhus
Kreditbank, the Dansk Købmandsbank, the Esbjerg Kreditbank, the
Fredrikshavn Kreditbank, the Hjørring Kreditbank, the Odense Kreditbank,
the Randers Kreditbank, the Thisted Kreditbank, the Varde Kreditbank and
the Vejle Kreditbank. in denomination of 10 and 25 øre, 1, 2, 5, 10,
20, 25 and 50 kroner.
In 1914, 1 krone notes were introduced due to the outbreak of the First
World War .ò After the second WW the Allied Command issued
notes for 25 øre, 1, 5, 10, 50 and 100 kroner.
followed by 1000 kroner notes
.
In 1997, a complete new series was issued ranging from 50 to 1000
kroner.
In the Faroe Islands distinct
banknotes (see Faroese króna).are used, During the British occupation of the
islands in World War II Banknotes in circulation in
the Faroes were overstamped by the amt administration invalidating the
notes outside of the Faroes.
The modern Faroese banknotes were introduced in the 1950s. Although a
common misconception, the Faroese króna is not an independent currency,
but a separate set of DKK banknotes with a different design.
In Greenland, the colonial administration issued distinct banknotes
(see Greenland rigsdaler and Greenland krone). In 2006, the governments
of Denmark and the Greenland home rule authority announced that by 2008,
distinct Greenlandic banknotes will be introduced.
Due to this status, ordinary Danish banknotes are legal tender in both
Greenland and the Faroe Islands. |