Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Yugoslav krone. The krone ( Serbo-Croatian: крyна / kruna; Slovene: krona) was a short-lived, provisional currency used in parts of the then newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, parts of which had previously been part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (Austria-Hungary). It was worth of a dinar or 25 para and subdivided into one ...

  2. The Fiume Krone (Corona Fiumana) - (Cor., FiuK) was introduced on 18 April 1919 by over-printing the existing Austro-Hungarian Krone notes, under the authority of the Italian National Council of Fiume who ruled the city. There were two issues: the 1919/21 Issue (1 and 2 kronen), [1] and the 1920 Issue (2, 10, 20, 50, 100, and 1,000 kronen). [2]

  3. The florin was replaced by the Austro-Hungarian krone in 1892. 20th century. With the creation of Yugoslavia in 1918, the Serbian dinar was adopted alongside the Yugoslav krone in Croatia. For a short while, the Fiume krone was circulated in Fiume, today's Rijeka. The Serbian dinar also became the currency of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and ...

  4. Feb 1, 2015 · Usage on cs.wikipedia.org Jugoslávská koruna; Usage on de.wikipedia.org Jugoslawische Krone; Usage on en.wikipedia.org Yugoslav krone; User talk:Godot13/Archive 3; Wikipedia:Featured pictures thumbs/49; Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/March-2015; User:Godot13/Featured Pictures/World banknotes

  5. Yugoslav krone Kingdom of Serbs, Croats & Slovenes , 400 Kronen overstamped on a 100 Dinara note (1919). The krone was a short-lived, provisional currency used in parts of the then newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes which had previously been part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire .

  6. 3. Serbia briefly used the Yugoslav dinar and krone. From 1920 to 2003, Serbia was part of the unified country of Yugoslavia and then the Union of Serbia and Montenegro. For most of this time, it used the Yugoslav dinar (also called the Yugoslav krone). This dinar went through many issues and revaluations, including the hard dinar, convertible ...

  7. The Krone replaced the Austro-Hungarian Krone equivalent on November 12, 1918. In the interim period before the introduction of the Yugoslav currency, it circulated in Slovenian, Croatian and Serb countries at an exchange rate of 1 dinar = 4 kroner alongside the Serbian dinar.

  1. Searches related to yugoslav krone wikipedia 2019

    yugoslav krone wikipedia 2019 2020yugoslav krone wikipedia 2019 movie
  1. People also search for