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Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark

The convertible mark (Serbo-Croatian: konvertibilna marka, Cyrillic: конвертибилна марка; sign: KM; code: BAM) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is divided into 100 Pfenig or Fening (Пфениг/Фенинг) and locally abbreviated KM.[1] While the currency and its subunits are uniform for both constituent polities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, namely the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) and Republika Srpska (RS), the designs of the KM 10, KM 20, KM 50, and KM 100 banknotes are differentiated for each polity.

Bosnia and Herzegovina
convertible mark
Konvertibilna marka (Serbo-Croatian, Latin)
Конвертибилна марка (Serbo-Croatian, Cyrillic)
Convertible marks coins and banknotes1
ISO 4217
CodeBAM (numeric: 977)
Subunit0.01
Unit
PluralThe language(s) of this currency belong(s) to the Slavic languages. There is more than one way to construct plural forms.
SymbolKM
Denominations
Subunit
1100Fening
"Fening" is the official English language name of the subunit.
Symbol
Feningpf
Banknotes
 Freq. usedKM 10, KM 20, KM 50, KM 100
 Rarely usedKM 200
Coins5, 10, 20, and 50 fenings;
KM 1, KM 2, KM 5
Demographics
Date of introduction22 June 1998[1]
User(s) Bosnia and Herzegovina
Issuance
Central bankCentral Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Websitewww.cbbh.ba
PrinterImprimerie Oberthur
(by François-Charles Oberthür)
MintRoyal Mint, Llantrisant
Valuation
Inflation−0.9%
 Source, 2014 est.
 MethodCPI
Pegged withEuro (€) = KM 1.95583
1 Designs for KM 10, KM 20, KM 50, and KM 100 banknotes differ for the two constituent polities, the FBiH and RS, in some aspects, including images and order of scripts. The residual KM 200 banknote and all of the coins are identical for both polities.

History edit

The convertible mark was established by the 1995 Dayton Agreement. It replaced the Bosnia and Herzegovina dinar, Croatian kuna and Yugoslav novi dinar as the single currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1998. Mark refers to the Deutsche Mark, the currency to which it was pegged at par.[1]

Etymology edit

The names derive from German. The three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnian, Serbian and Croatian, have adopted the German nouns Mark and Pfennig as loanwords marka and pfenig. The Official Gazette of BiH (Bosnian: Službeni glasnik BiH), Official newspaper of FBiH (Bosnian: Službene novine FBiH) and other official documents recognised pfenig or пфениг[2] (depending on the script; Bosnian and Serbian use both Latin and Cyrillic equally, while Croatian uses only Latin) as the name of the subdivision.

Banknotes of 50 fenings circulated from 1998 to 2003.[1] They were denoted "50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA" / "50 КОНВЕРТИБИЛНИХ ПФЕНИГА"; technically, the word convertible should not qualify the word pfenig because only the mark is convertible.[3] (See Errors for all of the errors on banknotes and coins.) Coins of 10, 20, and 50 pfenigs have circulated since 1998[1] (the 5-pfenigs coin was released in 2006).[1] All of them are inscribed "~ feninga" / "~ фенинга" on the obverse. The misspelling fening/фенинг has never been corrected, and it took such a hold that it was officially adopted and not recognised as incorrect.[1]

Plurals and cases edit

Serbo-Croatian is subject to a case system. For the purposes of pluralizing currency terms, three situations are relevant:

  • In combination with numbers 1, 21, 31, 41, 51, 61, 71, 81, 101, 1001, et cetera (i. e. all numbers ending in "1" except 11), nouns use the nominative case singular (the base form):
màrka (màr: a – short vowel, rising tone) and pfénig/féning ((p)fé: e – short vowel, rising tone)
  • In combination with numbers whose final digit is 2, 3, or 4 (except 12, 13, and 14), nouns use the genitive case singular (the "paucal form"):
màrke (màr: a – short vowel, rising tone) and pféniga/féninga ((p)fé: e – short vowel, rising tone)
  • In combination with numbers 0, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 100, 1000, 10000, et cetera (i. e. all numbers ending in 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, 11, 12, 13, or 14), nouns use the genitive case plural:
mȁrākā (mȁr: a – short vowel, falling tone; vowels ā are not accented but have genitive length) and pfénīgā/fénīngā ((p)fé: e – short vowel, rising tone; vowels ī and ā are not accented but have genitive length)
(For further information on accents in BSC, see Serbo-Croatian phonology and Shtokavian dialect#Accentuation.)

For the pfenig, the plural is pfeniga/feninga with a short unaccented a, whereas the genitive plural is the same pfeniga/feninga but with a long unaccented i and a. A syllable after an accented syllable whose vowel is pronounced long and with a continuous tone, i. e. neither rising or falling, is said to have a genitive length (although the word does not necessarily have to be in the genitive case in order to have genitive length on its syllable; it can be in the locative also).

These matters should be noted when the local names are used in English. For example, the English plural "ten pfenigas" / "ten feningas" is incorrect because the final a in the BSC plural pfeniga/feninga already indicates the plural. Therefore "ten pfenigs" / "ten fenings" should be used. The Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina (CBBH) uses "fenings" as the English plural.[1] Likewise, "twenty-one markas", "two markes", and "twelve marakas" are incorrect; "twenty-one marks", "two marks", and "twelve marks", respectively, are correct.

Coins edit

In December 1998, coins were introduced in denominations of 10, 20 and 50 fenings.[1] Coins of 5 fenings, KM 1, KM 2 and KM 5 were introduced later.[1] The coins were designed by Bosnian designer Kenan Zekic[4] and minted at the Royal Mint in Llantrisant (Wales, UK).[1]

Coins of the convertible mark (1998–present)[1]
Image
O R
Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Diameter Mass Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapse
  5 fenings 18.00 mm 2.66 g nickel-plated steel reeded Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina, country name, denomination Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina, country name, year 2005–present 5 January 2006 Current
  10 fenings 20.00 mm 3.90 g copper-plated steel plain Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina, country name, denomination Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina, country name, year 1998–present 9 December 1998 Current
  20 fenings 22.00 mm 4.50 g reeded 1998–present
  50 fenings 24.00 mm 5.15 g 1998–present
  1 mark   23.25 mm 4.95 g nickel-plated steel milled and smooth Denomination, country name, indented and inverted triangles* Coat of arms of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2000–present 31 July 2000 Current
  2 marks 25.75 mm 6.90 g cupro-nickel (inner ring);
golden 5.5%;
nickel-brass combination (outer ring)
Peace dove 2000–present
  5 marks 30.00 mm 10.35 g nickel-brass (inner ring);
copper-nickel (outer ring)
milled 2005–present 5 January 2006
These images are to scale at 2.5 pixels per millimetre. For table standards, see the coin specification table.
  • The triangles are intended for the visually impaired.

Banknotes edit

In 1998, notes were introduced in denominations of 50 fenings, KM 1, KM 5, KM 10, KM 20, KM 50, and KM 100. km 200 notes were added in 2002, while the 50-fening and KM 1 and KM 5 notes were later withdrawn from circulation. All current notes are valid throughout the nation.[1]

The Central Bank of Bosnia Herzegovina issues the banknotes, with distinct designs for the constituent polities of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska,1 except for the largest denomination, i. e. the KM 200 note.[1] On the notes for the Republika Srpska, inscriptions are printed first in Cyrillic and then Latin script, and vice versa. Banknotes, with the exception of the KM 200 note, are printed by the French company Oberthur.[1][5]

Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina issues edit

Banknotes of the convertible mark for FBiH (1998–present)[1]
Image
O R
Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Dimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapse
O R 50 fenings 120 mm × 60 mm Central Bank monogram repeated vertically Skender Kulenović Stećak Zgošca fragment No date
(1998)
22 June 1998 1 January 2003[6] 1 April 2018[7]
O R 1 mark   120 mm × 60 mm Ivan Franjo Jukić Stećak Stolac fragment 1 January 2009[8]
O R 5 marks 122 mm × 62 mm Meša Selimović Trees No date
(1998)
1 January 2010[9] 1 April 2018[7]
  10 marks 130 mm × 65 mm Mehmedalija Mak Dizdar Stećak Križevići fragment (until 2017 print, wrongly named as "Stećak Radimlja", corrected in 2019 print)[10][11] No date
(1998)
(2008)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)
22 June 1998
4 November 2008
1 June 2012
14 April 2017
Current
  20 marks 138 mm × 68 mm Antun Branko Šimić Stećak Radimlja fragment No date
(1998)
(2008)
(2012)
(2019)
  50 marks 146 mm × 71 mm Musa Ćazim Ćatić Stone relief No date
(1998)
(2002)
(2007)
(2008)
(2009)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)

22 June 1998
No date (2002)
1 March 2007
No date (2008)
14 December 2009
1 June 2012
  100 marks 154 mm × 74 mm Nikola Šop Stećak Zgošca fragment No date
(1998)
(2002)
(2007)
(2008)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)

27 July 1998
No date (2002)
1 March 2007
No date (2008)
1 June 2012
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.

Republika Srpska issues edit

Banknotes of the convertible mark for RS (1998–present)[1]
Image
O R
Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Dimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapse
O R 50 fenings 120 mm × 60 mm Central Bank monogram repeated vertically Branko Ćopić House and books No date
(1998)
22 June 1998 1 January 2003[6] 1 April 2018[7]
O R 1 mark   120 mm × 60 mm Ivo Andrić The Bridge on the Drina 15 July 1998[a][12]
O R [b]5 marks 122 mm × 62 mm Meša Selimović Trees No date
(1998)
1 January 2010[9] 1 April 2018[7]
  10 marks 130 mm × 65 mm Aleksa Šantić Loaf of bread No date
(1998)
(2008)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)

22 June 1998
4 November 2008
1 June 2012
Current
  20 marks 138 mm × 68 mm Filip Višnjić Gusle (musical instrument) No date
(1998)
(2008)
(2012)
(2019)
  50 marks 146 mm × 71 mm Jovan Dučić pen, eyeglasses and book No date
(1998)
(2002)
(2007)
(2008)
(2009)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)

22 June 1998
No date (2002)
1 March 2007
No date (2008)
14 December 2009
1 June 2012
  100 marks 154 mm × 74 mm Petar Kočić pen, eyeglasses and book No date
(1998)
(2002)
(2007)
(2008)
(2012)
(2017)
(2019)

27 July 1998
No date (2002)
1 March 2007
No date (2008)
1 June 2012
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.

Nationwide issues edit

The portraits of Ivan Franjo Jukić and Meša Selimović, which are both writers, were featured by consensus between both entities on all KM 1 and KM 5 notes used between 1998 and 2010.[1]

On 15 May 2002, a KM 200 banknote, designed by Robert Kalina, was introduced during a promotion that was held in the Central Bank of BH. The reverse design which depicts a bridge is meant to resemble the euro banknotes, which were also designed by Robert Kalina. After an international tender, the Austrian company Oesterreichische Banknoten und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH (OeBS) in Vienna was chosen to print the notes. Initially, six million were ordered.[13]

Banknotes of the convertible mark for both entities (2002–present)[1]
Image
O R
Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Dimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapse
  200 marks 156 mm × 76 mm Image of the Bridge on River Drina[13] Ivo Andrić The Bridge on the Drina No date
(2002)
17 August 2022

15 May 2002
Current
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.

Exchange rates edit

Initially the mark was pegged to the Deutsche mark at par.[1] Since the replacement of the German mark by the euro in 2002, the Bosnian convertible mark uses the same fixed exchange rate to euro that the German mark had (that is, 1 EUR = 1.95583 BAM).[1]

Current BAM exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From OANDA: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY

Errors edit

 
Detail on KM 1 banknote for Republika Srpska with misspelled name of Ivo Andrić written in Cyrillic as "ИВО АНДРИЂ / IVO ANDRIĐ" instead of "ИВО АНДРИЋ / IVO ANDRIĆ"

Banknotes and coins of Bosnia and Herzegovina have many mistakes and inconsistencies.[1]

Officially, only one banknote has not been released in circulation because of a mistake, even though other banknotes with mistakes had been issued.[1]

Banknote examples edit

These are the most important mistakes that have been noticed to date:

  • Both designs of the 50 fening banknote imprinted the adjective "convertible" next to the noun "pfenig", although only the mark has the "convertible" prefix ("50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA" / "50 КОНВЕРТИБИЛНИХ ПФЕНИГА").[3]
  • The KM 1 banknote for Republika Srpska was imprinted "ИВО АНДРИЂ / IVO ANDRIĐ" instead of "ИВО АНДРИЋ / IVO ANDRIĆ". This banknote was immediately removed from circulation.[a]
  • Both designs of the KM 5 banknote had the Cyrillic word "five" incorrectly printed in Latin script on its reverse ("PET КОНВЕРТИБИЛНИХ МАРАКА", instead of "ПЕТ ..."). Also, Meša Selimović's name is written in Cyrillic as "Меща Селимовић" instead of "Meша Селимовић" (the letter щ is not used in any of the Balkan Cyrillic-written languages except Bulgarian).
  • The KM 10 banknote for Republika Srpska, first series, 1998, had Aleksa Šantić's name printed in Latin script although it should have been printed in Cyrillic script as it is on all other examples of the 1998 series.
  • Both designs of the KM 100 banknote[which?] were incorrectly printed with the Cyrillic abbreviation of the Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina with "Џ / Dž" instead of "Ц / C" (i. e. "ЏББХ / BBH" instead of "ЦББХ / CBBH") in the safety bar.
  • In 2017, Edin Bujak of the Department of Archaeology of the Faculty of Philosophy in Sarajevo noticed a mistake on the KM 10 banknote for the Federation of B&H. The picture of the stećak on the reverse is actually a picture of a stećak from Križevići, Olovo and not from the Radimlja necropolis as stated on the banknote. The Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina confirmed this mistake, and it will be corrected in future printing of the banknote.[14]

Coin examples edit

These are the most important mistakes that have been noticed to date:

  • The name of the subdivision of the convertible mark has been incorrectly engraved on coins: the word "pfenig" has been engraved as "fening". This mistake has taken such a hold, especially because there were and are no 50 pfenig/fening banknotes in circulation, that "fening" was officially adopted as the name of the hundredth unit of the KM and is not recognized as incorrect.[1]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This Republika Srpska issue of KM 1 was immediately removed from circulation because of a typo. Instead of "Иво Андрић" it was written "Иво Андриђ". The decision not to release into the circulation the banknote in denominations of 1 convertible mark was published in Official Gazette of BiH (No 13/98).
  2. ^ This Republika Srpska issue of KM 5 is same as the one for FBiH but for RS issue denominations are written in Cyrillic script first and then in Latin (for FBiH issue vice versa).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x . cbbh.ba. Sarajevo: Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina. p. 1. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015. Fening details: | Mint: Royal Mint, Llantrisant | Released into Circulation: December 9th, 1998, with the exception of the 5 fening coin which is in circulation from January 5, 2006. | Face: Map of BH with overlay of denomination | Reverse: Flag of BH | The Words: "Bosna i Hercegovina" and "Fening" are on the face and reverse edges in both Latin and Cyrillic script. The date of production is on the reverse side on the left from the BH flag. | 10, 20 and 50 fening coins are made of copper-plated steel, while 5 fening coin is made of nickel-plated steel.
  2. ^ Mulaomerović, Jasminko (2004). "Novi numizmatičar" [New numismatist] (in Bosnian). 2 (5) (3 (8) ed.). Sarajevo: Numizmatičko društvo – Sarajevo: 20–21. Retrieved 20 December 2015 – via Scribd. Mi, u našoj veseloj zemlji, imamo konvertibilnu marku kao novčanu jedinicu. Marka ima svoj najsitniji dio koji se zove pfenig. Tako kaže Službeni glasnik BiH, a Službeni glasnik – to ti je zakon. Ko misli da to i nije baš zakon, jer se tu objavljuju stvari koje se tiču vesele zemlje Bosne i Hercegovine, tu su i Službene novine Federacije BiH koje to potvrđuju, i to na sva tri jezika i u dva pisma. (...) Međutim, imamo mi i kovanice. Iako su i one dijelovi marke, samo odmetala, one se kod nas drugačije zovu – fening. Tako na kovanicama možemo pročitati 10 feninga, 20 feninga i 50 feninga. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ a b Mulaomerović, Jasminko (2004). "Novi numizmatičar" [New numismatist] (in Bosnian). 2 (5) (3 (8) ed.). Sarajevo: Numizmatičko društvo – Sarajevo: 20–21. Retrieved 20 December 2015 – via Scribd. ... i u dva pisma. Da je to tako vidi se na novčanicama od 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA, i onim sa Skenderom Kulenovićem i onim sa Brankom Ćopićem. Doduše, „Službeni(e)..." i stvarne novčanice se malo razilaze u detaljima pa tako u Službeni(e)... imamo „konvertibilnu marku, apoen od 50 pfeniga", a na novčanicama „50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA". Dakle, prema Službeni(e)... marka jeste konvertibilna, ali pfenig nije, dok je prema novčanici i PFENIG konvertibilan. Ima tu još malo nejasnoća oko velikog i malog slova u riječi „pfenig", ali kao da je to, uostalom, i važno, i ko će sve to, bogati, gledati!? {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Website of Kenan Zekic. Available at: http://kenanzekic.com.ba/ 2014-12-18 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Mulic, Josef (2000). Papirini novac na tlu Bosne i Hercegovine od 1918. godine do danas
  6. ^ a b . Cbbh.ba. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  9. ^ a b . Cbbh.ba. Archived from the original on 2016-03-14. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  10. ^ "Novčanice KM". www.cbbh.ba. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  11. ^ H, S. "Na novčanici od 10 KM nije stećak iz Radimlje, greška će biti ispravljena". Radio Sarajevo.
  12. ^ The decision not to release into the circulation the banknote in denominations of 1 convertible mark (Official Gazette of BiH (No 13/98))
  13. ^ a b . Cbbh.ba. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  14. ^ "Na novčanici od 10 KM nije stećak iz Radimlje, greška će biti ispravljena". Radiosarajevo.ba. Retrieved 4 January 2018.

External links edit

  • Historical and current banknotes of Bosnia and Herzegovina

bosnia, herzegovina, convertible, mark, КМ, cyrillic, script, redirects, here, other, uses, latin, script, convertible, mark, serbo, croatian, konvertibilna, marka, cyrillic, конвертибилна, марка, sign, code, currency, bosnia, herzegovina, divided, into, pfeni. KM in Cyrillic script redirects here For other uses of KM see KM in Latin script The convertible mark Serbo Croatian konvertibilna marka Cyrillic konvertibilna marka sign KM code BAM is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina It is divided into 100 Pfenig or Fening Pfenig Fening and locally abbreviated KM 1 While the currency and its subunits are uniform for both constituent polities of Bosnia and Herzegovina namely the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina FBiH and Republika Srpska RS the designs of the KM 10 KM 20 KM 50 and KM 100 banknotes are differentiated for each polity Bosnia and Herzegovinaconvertible markKonvertibilna marka Serbo Croatian Latin Konvertibilna marka Serbo Croatian Cyrillic Convertible marks coins and banknotes1ISO 4217CodeBAM numeric 977 Subunit0 01UnitPluralThe language s of this currency belong s to the Slavic languages There is more than one way to construct plural forms SymbolKM DenominationsSubunit 1 100Fening Fening is the official English language name of the subunit Symbol FeningpfBanknotes Freq usedKM 10 KM 20 KM 50 KM 100 Rarely usedKM 200Coins5 10 20 and 50 fenings KM 1 KM 2 KM 5DemographicsDate of introduction22 June 1998 1 User s Bosnia and HerzegovinaIssuanceCentral bankCentral Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina Websitewww wbr cbbh wbr baPrinterImprimerie Oberthur by Francois Charles Oberthur MintRoyal Mint LlantrisantValuationInflation 0 9 SourceThe World Factbook 2014 est MethodCPIPegged withEuro KM 1 955831 Designs for KM 10 KM 20 KM 50 and KM 100 banknotes differ for the two constituent polities the FBiH and RS in some aspects including images and order of scripts The residual KM 200 banknote and all of the coins are identical for both polities Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 1 1 Plurals and cases 2 Coins 3 Banknotes 3 1 Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina issues 3 2 Republika Srpska issues 3 3 Nationwide issues 4 Exchange rates 5 Errors 5 1 Banknote examples 5 2 Coin examples 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editThe convertible mark was established by the 1995 Dayton Agreement It replaced the Bosnia and Herzegovina dinar Croatian kuna and Yugoslav novi dinar as the single currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1998 Mark refers to the Deutsche Mark the currency to which it was pegged at par 1 Etymology edit The names derive from German The three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnian Serbian and Croatian have adopted the German nouns Mark and Pfennig as loanwords marka and pfenig The Official Gazette of BiH Bosnian Sluzbeni glasnik BiH Official newspaper of FBiH Bosnian Sluzbene novine FBiH and other official documents recognised pfenig or pfenig 2 depending on the script Bosnian and Serbian use both Latin and Cyrillic equally while Croatian uses only Latin as the name of the subdivision Banknotes of 50 fenings circulated from 1998 to 2003 1 They were denoted 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA technically the word convertible should not qualify the word pfenig because only the mark is convertible 3 See Errors for all of the errors on banknotes and coins Coins of 10 20 and 50 pfenigs have circulated since 1998 1 the 5 pfenigs coin was released in 2006 1 All of them are inscribed feninga feninga on the obverse The misspelling fening fening has never been corrected and it took such a hold that it was officially adopted and not recognised as incorrect 1 Plurals and cases edit Serbo Croatian is subject to a case system For the purposes of pluralizing currency terms three situations are relevant In combination with numbers 1 21 31 41 51 61 71 81 101 1001 et cetera i e all numbers ending in 1 except 11 nouns use the nominative case singular the base form marka mar a short vowel rising tone and pfenig fening p fe e short vowel rising tone dd In combination with numbers whose final digit is 2 3 or 4 except 12 13 and 14 nouns use the genitive case singular the paucal form marke mar a short vowel rising tone and pfeniga feninga p fe e short vowel rising tone dd In combination with numbers 0 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 100 1000 10000 et cetera i e all numbers ending in 5 6 7 8 9 0 11 12 13 or 14 nouns use the genitive case plural mȁraka mȁr a short vowel falling tone vowels a are not accented but have genitive length and pfeniga feninga p fe e short vowel rising tone vowels i and a are not accented but have genitive length dd For further information on accents in BSC see Serbo Croatian phonology and Shtokavian dialect Accentuation For the pfenig the plural is pfeniga feninga with a short unaccented a whereas the genitive plural is the same pfeniga feninga but with a long unaccented i and a A syllable after an accented syllable whose vowel is pronounced long and with a continuous tone i e neither rising or falling is said to have a genitive length although the word does not necessarily have to be in the genitive case in order to have genitive length on its syllable it can be in the locative also These matters should be noted when the local names are used in English For example the English plural ten pfenigas ten feningas is incorrect because the final a in the BSC plural pfeniga feninga already indicates the plural Therefore ten pfenigs ten fenings should be used The Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina CBBH uses fenings as the English plural 1 Likewise twenty one markas two markes and twelve marakas are incorrect twenty one marks two marks and twelve marks respectively are correct Coins editIn December 1998 coins were introduced in denominations of 10 20 and 50 fenings 1 Coins of 5 fenings KM 1 KM 2 and KM 5 were introduced later 1 The coins were designed by Bosnian designer Kenan Zekic 4 and minted at the Royal Mint in Llantrisant Wales UK 1 Coins of the convertible mark 1998 present 1 ImageO R Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDiameter Mass Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapseO R 5 fenings 18 00 mm 2 66 g nickel plated steel reeded Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina country name denomination Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina country name year 2005 present 5 January 2006 CurrentO R 10 fenings 20 00 mm 3 90 g copper plated steel plain Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina country name denomination Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina country name year 1998 present 9 December 1998 CurrentO R 20 fenings 22 00 mm 4 50 g reeded 1998 presentO R 50 fenings 24 00 mm 5 15 g 1998 presentO R 1 mark 23 25 mm 4 95 g nickel plated steel milled and smooth Denomination country name indented and inverted triangles Coat of arms of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2000 present 31 July 2000 CurrentO R 2 marks 25 75 mm 6 90 g cupro nickel inner ring golden 5 5 nickel brass combination outer ring Peace dove 2000 presentO R 5 marks 30 00 mm 10 35 g nickel brass inner ring copper nickel outer ring milled 2005 present 5 January 2006These images are to scale at 2 5 pixels per millimetre For table standards see the coin specification table The triangles are intended for the visually impaired Banknotes editIn 1998 notes were introduced in denominations of 50 fenings KM 1 KM 5 KM 10 KM 20 KM 50 and KM 100 km 200 notes were added in 2002 while the 50 fening and KM 1 and KM 5 notes were later withdrawn from circulation All current notes are valid throughout the nation 1 The Central Bank of Bosnia Herzegovina issues the banknotes with distinct designs for the constituent polities of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska 1 except for the largest denomination i e the KM 200 note 1 On the notes for the Republika Srpska inscriptions are printed first in Cyrillic and then Latin script and vice versa Banknotes with the exception of the KM 200 note are printed by the French company Oberthur 1 5 Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina issues edit Banknotes of the convertible mark for FBiH 1998 present 1 ImageO R Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapseO R 50 fenings 120 mm 60 mm Central Bank monogram repeated vertically Skender Kulenovic Stecak Zgosca fragment No date 1998 22 June 1998 1 January 2003 6 1 April 2018 7 O R 1 mark 120 mm 60 mm Ivan Franjo Jukic Stecak Stolac fragment 1 January 2009 8 O R 5 marks 122 mm 62 mm Mesa Selimovic Trees No date 1998 1 January 2010 9 1 April 2018 7 O R 10 marks 130 mm 65 mm Mehmedalija Mak Dizdar Stecak Krizevici fragment until 2017 print wrongly named as Stecak Radimlja corrected in 2019 print 10 11 No date 1998 2008 2012 2017 2019 22 June 1998 4 November 2008 1 June 201214 April 2017 CurrentO R 20 marks 138 mm 68 mm Antun Branko Simic Stecak Radimlja fragment No date 1998 2008 2012 2019 O R 50 marks 146 mm 71 mm Musa Cazim Catic Stone relief No date 1998 2002 2007 2008 2009 2012 2017 2019 22 June 1998 No date 2002 1 March 2007 No date 2008 14 December 2009 1 June 2012O R 100 marks 154 mm 74 mm Nikola Sop Stecak Zgosca fragment No date 1998 2002 2007 2008 2012 2017 2019 27 July 1998 No date 2002 1 March 2007 No date 2008 1 June 2012These images are to scale at 0 7 pixel per millimetre For table standards see the banknote specification table Republika Srpska issues edit Banknotes of the convertible mark for RS 1998 present 1 ImageO R Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapseO R 50 fenings 120 mm 60 mm Central Bank monogram repeated vertically Branko Copic House and books No date 1998 22 June 1998 1 January 2003 6 1 April 2018 7 O R 1 mark 120 mm 60 mm Ivo Andric The Bridge on the Drina 15 July 1998 a 12 O R b 5 marks 122 mm 62 mm Mesa Selimovic Trees No date 1998 1 January 2010 9 1 April 2018 7 O R 10 marks 130 mm 65 mm Aleksa Santic Loaf of bread No date 1998 2008 2012 2017 2019 22 June 1998 4 November 2008 1 June 2012 CurrentO R 20 marks 138 mm 68 mm Filip Visnjic Gusle musical instrument No date 1998 2008 2012 2019 O R 50 marks 146 mm 71 mm Jovan Ducic pen eyeglasses and book No date 1998 2002 2007 2008 2009 2012 2017 2019 22 June 1998 No date 2002 1 March 2007 No date 2008 14 December 2009 1 June 2012O R 100 marks 154 mm 74 mm Petar Kocic pen eyeglasses and book No date 1998 2002 2007 2008 2012 2017 2019 27 July 1998 No date 2002 1 March 2007 No date 2008 1 June 2012These images are to scale at 0 7 pixel per millimetre For table standards see the banknote specification table Nationwide issues edit The portraits of Ivan Franjo Jukic and Mesa Selimovic which are both writers were featured by consensus between both entities on all KM 1 and KM 5 notes used between 1998 and 2010 1 On 15 May 2002 a KM 200 banknote designed by Robert Kalina was introduced during a promotion that was held in the Central Bank of BH The reverse design which depicts a bridge is meant to resemble the euro banknotes which were also designed by Robert Kalina After an international tender the Austrian company Oesterreichische Banknoten und Sicherheitsdruck GmbH OeBS in Vienna was chosen to print the notes Initially six million were ordered 13 Banknotes of the convertible mark for both entities 2002 present 1 ImageO R Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDimensions Watermark Obverse Reverse printing issue withdrawal lapseO R 200 marks 156 mm 76 mm Image of the Bridge on River Drina 13 Ivo Andric The Bridge on the Drina No date 2002 17 August 2022 15 May 2002 CurrentThese images are to scale at 0 7 pixel per millimetre For table standards see the banknote specification table Exchange rates editInitially the mark was pegged to the Deutsche mark at par 1 Since the replacement of the German mark by the euro in 2002 the Bosnian convertible mark uses the same fixed exchange rate to euro that the German mark had that is 1 EUR 1 95583 BAM 1 Current BAM exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYErrors edit nbsp Detail on KM 1 banknote for Republika Srpska with misspelled name of Ivo Andric written in Cyrillic as IVO ANDRIЂ IVO ANDRIĐ instead of IVO ANDRIЋ IVO ANDRIC Banknotes and coins of Bosnia and Herzegovina have many mistakes and inconsistencies 1 Officially only one banknote has not been released in circulation because of a mistake even though other banknotes with mistakes had been issued 1 Banknote examples edit These are the most important mistakes that have been noticed to date Both designs of the 50 fening banknote imprinted the adjective convertible next to the noun pfenig although only the mark has the convertible prefix 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA 3 The KM 1 banknote for Republika Srpska was imprinted IVO ANDRIЂ IVO ANDRIĐ instead of IVO ANDRIЋ IVO ANDRIC This banknote was immediately removed from circulation a Both designs of the KM 5 banknote had the Cyrillic word five incorrectly printed in Latin script on its reverse PET KONVERTIBILNIH MARAKA instead of PET Also Mesa Selimovic s name is written in Cyrillic as Mesha Selimoviћ instead of Mesha Selimoviћ the letter sh is not used in any of the Balkan Cyrillic written languages except Bulgarian The KM 10 banknote for Republika Srpska first series 1998 had Aleksa Santic s name printed in Latin script although it should have been printed in Cyrillic script as it is on all other examples of the 1998 series Both designs of the KM 100 banknote which were incorrectly printed with the Cyrillic abbreviation of the Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina with Џ Dz instead of C C i e ЏBBH DzBBH instead of CBBH CBBH in the safety bar In 2017 Edin Bujak of the Department of Archaeology of the Faculty of Philosophy in Sarajevo noticed a mistake on the KM 10 banknote for the Federation of B amp H The picture of the stecak on the reverse is actually a picture of a stecak from Krizevici Olovo and not from the Radimlja necropolis as stated on the banknote The Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina confirmed this mistake and it will be corrected in future printing of the banknote 14 Coin examples edit These are the most important mistakes that have been noticed to date The name of the subdivision of the convertible mark has been incorrectly engraved on coins the word pfenig has been engraved as fening This mistake has taken such a hold especially because there were and are no 50 pfenig fening banknotes in circulation that fening was officially adopted as the name of the hundredth unit of the KM and is not recognized as incorrect 1 See also editCurrencies related to the euro Economy of Bosnia and HerzegovinaNotes edit This Republika Srpska issue of KM 1 was immediately removed from circulation because of a typo Instead of Ivo Andriћ it was written Ivo Andriђ The decision not to release into the circulation the banknote in denominations of 1 convertible mark was published in Official Gazette of BiH No 13 98 This Republika Srpska issue of KM 5 is same as the one for FBiH but for RS issue denominations are written in Cyrillic script first and then in Latin for FBiH issue vice versa References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x BH Currency KM Banknotes and Coins cbbh ba Sarajevo Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina p 1 Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 20 December 2015 Fening details Mint Royal Mint Llantrisant Released into Circulation December 9th 1998 with the exception of the 5 fening coin which is in circulation from January 5 2006 Face Map of BH with overlay of denomination Reverse Flag of BH The Words Bosna i Hercegovina and Fening are on the face and reverse edges in both Latin and Cyrillic script The date of production is on the reverse side on the left from the BH flag 10 20 and 50 fening coins are made of copper plated steel while 5 fening coin is made of nickel plated steel Mulaomerovic Jasminko 2004 Novi numizmaticar New numismatist in Bosnian 2 5 3 8 ed Sarajevo Numizmaticko drustvo Sarajevo 20 21 Retrieved 20 December 2015 via Scribd Mi u nasoj veseloj zemlji imamo konvertibilnu marku kao novcanu jedinicu Marka ima svoj najsitniji dio koji se zove pfenig Tako kaze Sluzbeni glasnik BiH a Sluzbeni glasnik to ti je zakon Ko misli da to i nije bas zakon jer se tu objavljuju stvari koje se ticu vesele zemlje Bosne i Hercegovine tu su i Sluzbene novine Federacije BiH koje to potvrđuju i to na sva tri jezika i u dva pisma Međutim imamo mi i kovanice Iako su i one dijelovi marke samo odmetala one se kod nas drugacije zovu fening Tako na kovanicama mozemo procitati 10 feninga 20 feninga i 50 feninga a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Mulaomerovic Jasminko 2004 Novi numizmaticar New numismatist in Bosnian 2 5 3 8 ed Sarajevo Numizmaticko drustvo Sarajevo 20 21 Retrieved 20 December 2015 via Scribd i u dva pisma Da je to tako vidi se na novcanicama od 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA i onim sa Skenderom Kulenovicem i onim sa Brankom Copicem Doduse Sluzbeni e i stvarne novcanice se malo razilaze u detaljima pa tako u Sluzbeni e imamo konvertibilnu marku apoen od 50 pfeniga a na novcanicama 50 KONVERTIBILNIH PFENIGA Dakle prema Sluzbeni e marka jeste konvertibilna ali pfenig nije dok je prema novcanici i PFENIG konvertibilan Ima tu jos malo nejasnoca oko velikog i malog slova u rijeci pfenig ali kao da je to uostalom i vazno i ko ce sve to bogati gledati a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Website of Kenan Zekic Available at http kenanzekic com ba Archived 2014 12 18 at the Wayback Machine Mulic Josef 2000 Papirini novac na tlu Bosne i Hercegovine od 1918 godine do danas a b CBBH Cbbh ba Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 3 May 2016 a b c d CBBH Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Retrieved 2014 02 09 CBBH Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 2014 02 09 a b CBBH Cbbh ba Archived from the original on 2016 03 14 Retrieved 3 May 2016 Novcanice KM www cbbh ba Retrieved 16 July 2020 H S Na novcanici od 10 KM nije stecak iz Radimlje greska ce biti ispravljena Radio Sarajevo The decision not to release into the circulation the banknote in denominations of 1 convertible mark Official Gazette of BiH No 13 98 a b CBBH Cbbh ba Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 3 May 2016 Na novcanici od 10 KM nije stecak iz Radimlje greska ce biti ispravljena Radiosarajevo ba Retrieved 4 January 2018 External links editHistorical and current banknotes of Bosnia and Herzegovina Portals nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina nbsp Europe nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark amp oldid 1190421191, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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