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  1. Derived from the Dutch guilder are the Netherlands Antillean guilder (still in use in Curaçao and Sint Maarten) and the Surinamese guilder (replaced in 2004 by the Surinamese dollar ). History. The gulden emerged as the official currency of the Burgundian Netherlands after the 1434 monetary reform done under Philip the Good.

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  2. The Netherlands Indies guilder ( Dutch: Nederlands-Indische gulden, Malay - Van Ophuijsen spelling: Roepiah Hindia-Belanda [1]) was the unit of account of the Dutch East Indies from 1602 under the United East India Company ( Dutch: Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie; VOC ), following Dutch practice first adopted in the 15th century (guilder coin...

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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GuilderGuilder - Wikipedia

    Guilder is the English translation of the Dutch and German gulden, originally shortened from Middle High German guldin pfenninc "gold penny". This was the term that became current in the southern and western parts of the Holy Roman Empire for the Fiorino d'oro (introduced in 1252 in the Republic of Florence ).

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  5. The following charts incorporate material selected both from the original list and from the annotations. It should be noted that there were no universal standards in the seventeenth century, as is evident from several of the following terms for which Mr. van Laer cites numerous variations in value.

  6. guilder, former monetary unit of the Netherlands. In 2002 the guilder ceased to be legal tender after the euro, the monetary unit of the European Union, became the country’s sole currency. The guilder was adopted as the Netherlands’ monetary unit in 1816, though its roots trace to the 14th century,

  7. Women in the 1838 Dutch Civil Code The nationality of married women was determined in the same way as in the Code Civil . [32] This meant that a woman's nationality was dependent on the nationality of her husband.

  8. The British Pound occupied a similar status in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Preceding the British pound in this leading role was the Dutch guilder, also known as the florin. This paper explores the florin’s loss of reserve currency status over the period 1781-1792, employing a new dataset assembled from archival sources.

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