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Faroese króna

The króna (plural: krónur; sign: kr) is the currency of the Faroe Islands. It is issued by Danmarks Nationalbank, the central bank of Denmark. It is not a separate currency, but is rather a local issue of banknotes denominated in the Danish krone, although Danish-issued coins are still used. Consequently, it does not have an ISO 4217 currency code and instead shares that of the Danish krone, DKK. This means that in the Faroe Islands, credit cards are charged in Danish kroner. The króna is subdivided into 100 oyru(r).

Faroese króna
ISO 4217
CodeNone
(FOK unofficially)
Unit
Pluralkrónur
Symbolkr
Denominations
Subunit
1100oyra
Plural
oyraoyru(r)
Banknotes50, 100, 200, 500, 1000 krónur
Coins50 oyru(r), 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 krónur
Demographics
User(s) Faroe Islands (Denmark), alongside krone
Issuance
Central bankDanmarks Nationalbank
 Websitewww.nationalbanken.dk
Valuation
Inflation-1.1%
 Source, 2009
Pegged withDanish krone at par

History

When German forces invaded and occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940, the Danish krone was used in the Faroes. However, all exchange between the Faroes and Denmark halted as a result of the occupation, leaving one currency to develop in two markets independently of each other. On 31 May 1940, special Faroese banknotes were introduced. They consisted of Danish notes with a special stamp. These notes replaced unstamped Danish at par.[1]

From 14 October 1940, new banknotes were printed "on behalf of the National Bank of Denmark."[2] The value of these new banknotes was the same as those already in use. On 18 December 1940, a Currency Central was established in order to monitor foreign trade and to secure the solvency of the Faroes. Currency Central was headed by a board of nine, the judge, who was chairman, one representative of Faroe Fish Export, one representative of the Faroese Merchants' Union, one representative of the bank Føroya Banki, one representative of the savings bank Føroya Sparikassi and four representatives of the Løgting.[3]

On 18 December 1940, the Faroese króna was pegged to the British pound at a rate of 22.4 krónur = 1 pound.[4] This rate was officially accepted by the British government in a treaty titled "Agreement between His Britannic Majesty's Government and the Administration of the Faroe Islands, for Regulating the Financial Relations between the United Kingdom and the Faroe Islands," which came into force on 27 March 1941.[5] At the same time, the Board of the Currency Central was reorganised to only three members, one representative of the British Government, one representative of the State (referring to the State of Denmark, meaning the County of Faroe), and one representative of the Løgting or the parliamentary National Board.[6] In 1941, coins were struck in London for use on the Faroe Islands.

As of 12 April 1949, the Faroese króna was separated from the pound sterling and fixed to the Danish krone at parity.[7] This arrangement is still in effect. Although Faroese banknotes were issued "on behalf of the National Bank of Denmark," the National Bank of Denmark does not claim any rights to Faroese banknotes issued prior to 1951.[8]

Exchange with the Danish krone

Danish kroner are exchanged to Faroese krónur and vice versa by the National Bank of Denmark free of charge. While normal Danish bank notes are no longer intended as legal tender in the Faroes, they are accepted there in all situations. In Denmark proper, existence of the Faroese króna is poorly known, particularly the fact that it is officially the same currency as the Danish krone and that the notes can be exchanged by any Danish bank without charge. Consequently, very few Danish stores will accept Faroese notes. Also, exchange offices in other countries often have problems with them. People travelling from the Faroes are often advised to exchange their cash prior to embarking in order to prevent potential complications arising from this situation.

Coins

The Faroe Islands use standard Danish coinage, but the region has experienced a shortage of small currency on several occasions, leading to non-standard issues.

During the late 19th century, German national C.F. Siemsen, a merchant conducting business in both the Faroe Islands and Iceland, issued his own private coinage. This issue is brass, one side carrying the inscription: CFS and the other side the denomination: 4 or 16 skilling in goods ("x SKILLING I VARE"). Due to a shortage of currency in 1929–33, two merchants issued their own coins as well; J.F. Kjølbro in Klaksvík and S.P. Petersens Eftf in Fuglafjørður. The Kjølbro issue is aluminium coins with denominations of 10, 25 and 50 øre, and 1, 2, 5, and 10 kroner. S.P. Petersens Eftf's issue was made of brass in denominations of 5, 10 and 25 øre, and 1, 2 and 5 kroner.[9]

During World War II, the Faroe Islands were separated from Denmark proper due to the occupations by the United Kingdom and Germany respectively. In 1941, a set of coins (1, 2, 5, 10 and 25 øre) was minted in London to alleviate a shortage of small change. This issue was identical to the pre-war Danish coinage already circulating, but is easily identified: the coins minted in London were made of bronze and copper-nickel, while the comparable coins minted in Denmark in 1941 were made of aluminium and zinc (with one exception). In addition, the British made set lacks both the mark of the Royal Danish Mint (a small heart) and the initials of the engraver and the mint master in Copenhagen.

Banknotes

 
Danish 10 kroner banknote with June 1940 overstamp

In 1940, Danish 5, 20, 50, 100, and 500 kroner notes were overstamped with Kun Gyldig paa Færøerne, Færø Amt, Juni 1940 (meaning “Only valid on the Faroe Islands, Faroe County, June 1940”) for issue on the Faroe Islands. Later that year, the Færø Amt issued distinct notes in denominations of 1, 5, 10, and 100 kroner. From 1951, notes were issued with texts in Faroese. The 1 kroner note was not continued, with 50 krónur introduced in 1967, followed by 500 and 1000 krónur in 1978, 20 krónur in 1986 and 200 krónur in 2003. Between 2001 and 2005, a new banknote series with new security features was introduced to replace older notes. Denominations are 50, 100, 200, 500, and 1000 krónur. On March 19, 2012, an updated version of the Faroese króna banknotes was released into circulation. The new notes are identical to the current issues, but the new notes now feature "Motion" windowed security threads and perfect registration devices instead of holographic patches on the fronts, and mother-of-pearl threads, and fluorescent colors added on the back of the notes.[10]

Faroese banknotes (2001–)
Image Value Dimensions Main colour Description[11] Date of issue
Obverse Reverse
50 kroner 125 × 72 mm Blue-grey Ram's horn Cliff near Sumba 3 July 2001
100 kroner 135 × 72 mm Gold Cod's tail Klaksvík 16 January 2003
200 kroner 145 × 72 mm Purple Ghost moth Tindhólmur 19 January 2004
500 kroner 155 × 72 mm Blue-green Shore crab Hvannasund 30 November 2004
1000 kroner 165 × 72 mm Red Purple sandpiper Sandoy 15 September 2005

Bank transfers

For international bank transfers including credit card transfers the ISO code has to be given. The Faroese króna has no official ISO 4217 code, so DKK is used for all credit card statements for visitors and international transfers of krónur (unless some other currency is used). Still transfers between Denmark and the Faroe Islands count as international with corresponding fees, and the Faroe Islands have its own IBAN and BIC codes with FO in them.

Current exchange rates

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

Numismatics

Faroese banknotes may be purchased by collectors at face value from Danmarks Nationalbank.[12] (Postverk Føroya, the Faroese postal service now known as 'Posta', used to be the sole supplier of Faroese banknotes to collectors, but does not sell banknotes anymore.)

See also

References

  1. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1940, p. 7 - Gazette of the Faroes (in Danish)
  2. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1940, p. 40 - Gazette of the Faroes (in Danish)
  3. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1940, p. 62-64 - Gazette of the Faroes (in Danish)
  4. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1940, p. 62-64 - Gazette of the Faroes (in Danish)
  5. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1941, p. 19-21 - Gazette of the Faroes, (in Danish and English)
  6. ^ Færöernes Kundgörelsessamling 1941, p. 22 - Gazette of the Faroes (in Danish)
  7. ^ Lov nr. 248 frá 12. april 1949 om pengesedler m.v. på Færøerne 2005-10-27 at the Wayback Machine - Act about Banknotes and more on the Faroes. (in Danish)
  8. ^ The previous Faroese banknote series 2006-06-19 at the Wayback Machine - The National Bank of Denmark.
  9. ^ Siegs Møntkatalog, "Norden", 2002 edition, pages 314-315 (in Danish)
  10. ^ Faroe Islands new note family confirmed 2012-10-06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews.com. Retrieved 2012-05-17.
  11. ^ "Banknotes and Coins of the Kingdom of Denmark" (PDF). nationalbanken.dk (1st ed.). Danmarks Nationalbank. August 2012. pp. 20–21. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  12. ^ "Royal Danish Mint".

External links

  • The banknotes of the Faroe Islands (in English and German)

faroese, króna, króna, plural, krónur, sign, currency, faroe, islands, issued, danmarks, nationalbank, central, bank, denmark, separate, currency, rather, local, issue, banknotes, denominated, danish, krone, although, danish, issued, coins, still, used, conseq. The krona plural kronur sign kr is the currency of the Faroe Islands It is issued by Danmarks Nationalbank the central bank of Denmark It is not a separate currency but is rather a local issue of banknotes denominated in the Danish krone although Danish issued coins are still used Consequently it does not have an ISO 4217 currency code and instead shares that of the Danish krone DKK This means that in the Faroe Islands credit cards are charged in Danish kroner The krona is subdivided into 100 oyru r Faroese kronaforoysk krona Faroese faerosk krone Danish ISO 4217CodeNone FOK unofficially UnitPluralkronurSymbolkr DenominationsSubunit 1 100oyraPlural oyraoyru r Banknotes50 100 200 500 1000 kronurCoins50 oyru r 1 2 5 10 20 kronurDemographicsUser s Faroe Islands Denmark alongside kroneIssuanceCentral bankDanmarks Nationalbank Websitewww wbr nationalbanken wbr dkValuationInflation 1 1 SourceThe World Factbook 2009Pegged withDanish krone at par Contents 1 History 2 Exchange with the Danish krone 3 Coins 4 Banknotes 5 Bank transfers 6 Current exchange rates 7 Numismatics 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditWhen German forces invaded and occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940 the Danish krone was used in the Faroes However all exchange between the Faroes and Denmark halted as a result of the occupation leaving one currency to develop in two markets independently of each other On 31 May 1940 special Faroese banknotes were introduced They consisted of Danish notes with a special stamp These notes replaced unstamped Danish at par 1 From 14 October 1940 new banknotes were printed on behalf of the National Bank of Denmark 2 The value of these new banknotes was the same as those already in use On 18 December 1940 a Currency Central was established in order to monitor foreign trade and to secure the solvency of the Faroes Currency Central was headed by a board of nine the judge who was chairman one representative of Faroe Fish Export one representative of the Faroese Merchants Union one representative of the bank Foroya Banki one representative of the savings bank Foroya Sparikassi and four representatives of the Logting 3 On 18 December 1940 the Faroese krona was pegged to the British pound at a rate of 22 4 kronur 1 pound 4 This rate was officially accepted by the British government in a treaty titled Agreement between His Britannic Majesty s Government and the Administration of the Faroe Islands for Regulating the Financial Relations between the United Kingdom and the Faroe Islands which came into force on 27 March 1941 5 At the same time the Board of the Currency Central was reorganised to only three members one representative of the British Government one representative of the State referring to the State of Denmark meaning the County of Faroe and one representative of the Logting or the parliamentary National Board 6 In 1941 coins were struck in London for use on the Faroe Islands As of 12 April 1949 the Faroese krona was separated from the pound sterling and fixed to the Danish krone at parity 7 This arrangement is still in effect Although Faroese banknotes were issued on behalf of the National Bank of Denmark the National Bank of Denmark does not claim any rights to Faroese banknotes issued prior to 1951 8 Exchange with the Danish krone EditDanish kroner are exchanged to Faroese kronur and vice versa by the National Bank of Denmark free of charge While normal Danish bank notes are no longer intended as legal tender in the Faroes they are accepted there in all situations In Denmark proper existence of the Faroese krona is poorly known particularly the fact that it is officially the same currency as the Danish krone and that the notes can be exchanged by any Danish bank without charge Consequently very few Danish stores will accept Faroese notes Also exchange offices in other countries often have problems with them People travelling from the Faroes are often advised to exchange their cash prior to embarking in order to prevent potential complications arising from this situation Coins EditThe Faroe Islands use standard Danish coinage but the region has experienced a shortage of small currency on several occasions leading to non standard issues During the late 19th century German national C F Siemsen a merchant conducting business in both the Faroe Islands and Iceland issued his own private coinage This issue is brass one side carrying the inscription CFS and the other side the denomination 4 or 16 skilling in goods x SKILLING I VARE Due to a shortage of currency in 1929 33 two merchants issued their own coins as well J F Kjolbro in Klaksvik and S P Petersens Eftf in Fuglafjordur The Kjolbro issue is aluminium coins with denominations of 10 25 and 50 ore and 1 2 5 and 10 kroner S P Petersens Eftf s issue was made of brass in denominations of 5 10 and 25 ore and 1 2 and 5 kroner 9 During World War II the Faroe Islands were separated from Denmark proper due to the occupations by the United Kingdom and Germany respectively In 1941 a set of coins 1 2 5 10 and 25 ore was minted in London to alleviate a shortage of small change This issue was identical to the pre war Danish coinage already circulating but is easily identified the coins minted in London were made of bronze and copper nickel while the comparable coins minted in Denmark in 1941 were made of aluminium and zinc with one exception In addition the British made set lacks both the mark of the Royal Danish Mint a small heart and the initials of the engraver and the mint master in Copenhagen Banknotes Edit Danish 10 kroner banknote with June 1940 overstamp In 1940 Danish 5 20 50 100 and 500 kroner notes were overstamped with Kun Gyldig paa Faeroerne Faero Amt Juni 1940 meaning Only valid on the Faroe Islands Faroe County June 1940 for issue on the Faroe Islands Later that year the Faero Amt issued distinct notes in denominations of 1 5 10 and 100 kroner From 1951 notes were issued with texts in Faroese The 1 kroner note was not continued with 50 kronur introduced in 1967 followed by 500 and 1000 kronur in 1978 20 kronur in 1986 and 200 kronur in 2003 Between 2001 and 2005 a new banknote series with new security features was introduced to replace older notes Denominations are 50 100 200 500 and 1000 kronur On March 19 2012 an updated version of the Faroese krona banknotes was released into circulation The new notes are identical to the current issues but the new notes now feature Motion windowed security threads and perfect registration devices instead of holographic patches on the fronts and mother of pearl threads and fluorescent colors added on the back of the notes 10 Faroese banknotes 2001 Image Value Dimensions Main colour Description 11 Date of issueObverse Reverse50 kroner 125 72 mm Blue grey Ram s horn Cliff near Sumba 3 July 2001100 kroner 135 72 mm Gold Cod s tail Klaksvik 16 January 2003200 kroner 145 72 mm Purple Ghost moth Tindholmur 19 January 2004500 kroner 155 72 mm Blue green Shore crab Hvannasund 30 November 20041000 kroner 165 72 mm Red Purple sandpiper Sandoy 15 September 2005Bank transfers EditFor international bank transfers including credit card transfers the ISO code has to be given The Faroese krona has no official ISO 4217 code so DKK is used for all credit card statements for visitors and international transfers of kronur unless some other currency is used Still transfers between Denmark and the Faroe Islands count as international with corresponding fees and the Faroe Islands have its own IBAN and BIC codes with FO in them Current exchange rates EditCurrent DKK exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD EUR JPY USDFrom Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD EUR JPY USDFrom XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD EUR JPY USDFrom OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD EUR JPY USDNumismatics EditFaroese banknotes may be purchased by collectors at face value from Danmarks Nationalbank 12 Postverk Foroya the Faroese postal service now known as Posta used to be the sole supplier of Faroese banknotes to collectors but does not sell banknotes anymore See also EditExchange rate regime British occupation of the Faroe Islands in World War II Economy of the Faroe IslandsReferences Edit Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1940 p 7 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1940 p 40 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1940 p 62 64 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1940 p 62 64 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1941 p 19 21 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish and English Faeroernes Kundgorelsessamling 1941 p 22 Gazette of the Faroes in Danish Lov nr 248 fra 12 april 1949 om pengesedler m v pa Faeroerne Archived 2005 10 27 at the Wayback Machine Act about Banknotes and more on the Faroes in Danish The previous Faroese banknote series Archived 2006 06 19 at the Wayback Machine The National Bank of Denmark Siegs Montkatalog Norden 2002 edition pages 314 315 in Danish Faroe Islands new note family confirmed Archived 2012 10 06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com Retrieved 2012 05 17 Banknotes and Coins of the Kingdom of Denmark PDF nationalbanken dk 1st ed Danmarks Nationalbank August 2012 pp 20 21 Retrieved 3 July 2020 Royal Danish Mint Krause Chester L Clifford Mishler 1991 Standard Catalog of World Coins 1801 1991 18th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0873411501 Pick Albert 1994 Standard Catalog of World Paper Money General Issues Colin R Bruce II and Neil Shafer editors 7th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0 87341 207 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Faroese krona The banknotes of the Faroe Islands in English and German Portals Economy Europe Kingdom of Denmark Faroe Islands Money Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Faroese krona amp oldid 1122758323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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