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Haitian gourde

The gourde (French: [ɡuʁd]) or goud (Haitian Creole: [ɡud]) is the currency of Haiti. Its ISO 4217 code is HTG and it is divided into 100 centimes (French) or santim (Creole).

Haitian gourde
ISO 4217
CodeHTG (numeric: 332)
Subunit0.01
Unit
SymbolG
Denominations
Superunit
 5Dollar ($)
Subunit
5100Penny (p)
1100Centime (c)
Banknotes
 Freq. usedG 10, G 25, G 50, G 100, G 250, G 500
 Rarely usedG 1, G 2, G 5, G 20, G 1,000
Coins5c, 10c, 20c, 50c, G 1, G 5
Demographics
User(s) Haiti
Issuance
Central bankBanque de la République d'Haïti
 Websitewww.brh.ht
Valuation
Inflation22.8%
 SourceThe Global Economy, 2020
Republique d'Haïti, 10 Gourdes (1827).

The word "gourde" is a French cognate for the Spanish term "gordo", from the "pesos gordos" (also known in English as "hard" pieces of eight, and in French as "piastres fortes espagnoles") in which colonial-era contracts within the Spanish sphere of influence were often denominated.[1]

First gourde, 1813–1870 edit

The first gourde was introduced in 1813 and replaced the livre at a rate of G 1 = 8 livres and 5 sous.

Coins edit

The first issues of coins were silver pieces of 6, 12, and 25 centimes. The Haitian government attempted to make money by declaring a much higher value to their coins than the intrinsic value of the metal. In 1827, 50c and 100c coins were introduced, followed by 1c and 2c in 1828. In 1846 and 1850, 6+14c coins were issued as well as 6c coins. In 1863, bronze coins, produced by the Heaton mint of Birmingham, were issued. These were in denominations of 5c, 10c and 20c and were the last coins of the first gourde.

Banknotes edit

The governments of Haiti issued paper money in denominations of G 1, G 2, G 5, G 10, G 20, G 25, G 50, G 100, G 500, and G 1,000.

Second gourde, 1870–1872 edit

In 1870 the gourde was revalued at a rate of ten to one. Only banknotes were issued for this second gourde, with the government issuing notes of G 10 and G 25.

Third gourde, 1872–present edit

In 1872, the gourde was again revalued, this time at a rate of three hundred to one. In the early years of this third gourde, only banknotes were being issued and the name piastre was sometimes used instead of gourde, especially on a banknote issue dated 1875. In 1881, the gourde was linked to the French franc at F 5 = G 1 and coin production recommenced.

The peg to the franc did not last, however. In 1912, the gourde was pegged to the US dollar at a value of G 5 to US$1 - although this peg was also abandoned in 1989, and the currency now floats. Due to the old link, G 5 is often referred to as a "Haitian dollar" and 5c is called a "Haitian penny".[citation needed] Indeed, in many places, prices are given not in gourdes, but rather in "Haitian dollars", which must be multiplied by five to convert to gourdes.[citation needed]

Coins edit

10 centimes 1949
 
Dumarsais Estimé Coat of arms

The 1881 issue of coins consisted of denominations of 1c, 2c, 10c, 20c, and 50c and G 1. 5c coins were added in 1889. Production of the 1c and 2c and G 1 pieces ceased in the mid-1890s, whilst coin production ceased entirely from 1908 until 1949, when 5c and 10c coins were again minted. These were followed by 20c pieces in 1956, 50c in 1972 and G 1 and G 5 in 1995.

Coins currently in circulation are:

  • 50c
  • G 1
  • G 5

Banknotes edit

 
Banque nationale de la République d'Haïti, 1 gourde (1916).

In 1875,[citation needed] banknotes were issued by the National Bank of Haiti in denominations of 25c, 1 and 5 piastres (equal to the gourde). Following this, banknotes were issued in denominations ranging from 10c to G 5 by the various Haitian governments until 1916, when the National Bank of the Republic of Haiti (BNRH) began issuing notes. In 1920, G 1, G 2, G 5, G 10 and G 20 notes were issued, with G 50 and G 100 added in 1925. In the 1970s, G 25, G 250, and G 500 notes were introduced. In 1979, the Bank of the Republic of Haiti replaced the BNRH as the paper money issuing body. A 1,000 gourde note was introduced in 1999, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the founding of Port-au-Prince. A G 20 note was released into circulation in 2001, both as a commemorative (to celebrate the bicentennial of the Constitution of Toussaint L'Ouverture) and as a regular issue. In 2004, the Bank of the Republic of Haiti issued a series of notes to commemorate the bicentennial of Haiti.

Banknotes currently in circulation are:

  • G 10
  • G 25
  • G 50
  • G 100
  • G 250
  • G 500
  • G 1,000
Older series
Image Value Obverse Reverse Year
[1] G 10 Catherine Flon Arcahaie sewing the first flag of Haiti (1803) Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[2] G 20 François-Dominique Toussaint l'Ouverture Constitution of Haiti 2001
[3] G 25 The Palace of Justice in Port-au-Prince Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[4] G 50 Lysius Félicité Salomon Jeune Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[5] G 100 Henri Christophe (President of Northern Haiti, later King Henri I of Haiti) Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[6] G 250 Jean-Jacques Dessalines (Emperor Jacques I of Haiti) Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[7] G 500 Alexandre Sabès Pétion (President of Southern Haiti) Coat of arms of Haiti 2000
[8] G 1,000 President Florvil Hyppolite Marché Vallière 1999
Commemorative banknotes of the Haitian gourde
Image Value Obverse Reverse Anotations Year
[9] G 20 François-Dominique Toussaint Louverture Constitution of Haiti of 1801 Commemorative text on the watermark area of the note; gold foil strip on the right edge of the note; slightly curved serial numbers on either side of the front of the note 2001

Biccentenial of the Independence (1804–2004) series edit

Biccentenial of the Independence (1804–2004) currently in circulation
Image Value Obverse Reverse Year
[10] G 10 (Dix Gourdes; Dis Goud) Sanité Belair (Attack and take of the Crête-à-Pierrot) Fort Cap Rouge (Jacmel) 2004
[11] G 25 (Vingt-Cinq Gourdes; Vennsenk Goud) General Nicolas Geffrard (Governor of Southern Haiti) Des Platons fortress (Dussis) 2004
[12] G 50 (Cinquante Gourdes; Senkant Goud) François Cappoix Fort Jalousière (Marmelade) 2004
[13] G 100 (Cent Gourdes; San Goud) Henri Christophe (President of Northern Haiti, later King Henri I of Haiti) (Invasion of Cape Haitian by the French army) Henry Citadel (Milot) 2004
[14] G 250 (Deux Cent Cinquante gourdes; Desan Senkant Goud) Jean-Jacques Dessalines (Emperor Jacques I of Haiti) Fort Décidé (Marchand) 2004
[15] G 500 (Cinq Cent Gourdes; Senksan Goud) Alexandre Sabès Pétion (President of Southern Haiti) Fort Jacques (Fermathe) 2004
[16] G 1,000 President Florvil Hyppolite Marché Vallière 1999

Note: The G 1, G 2, G 5, G 20 notes are no longer produced and are no longer in circulation.

Current HTG 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

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "3310.- Monnaie de la République d'Haiti » Haiti-Référence".

External links edit

  • Facsimiles of Haitian banknotes
  • Coins of Haiti 2014-10-29 at the Wayback Machine

haitian, gourde, gourde, redirects, here, other, uses, gourde, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, gourde, french, ɡuʁd, goud, haitian, creole, ɡud, currency, haiti, 4217, code, divided, into, centimes, french, santim, creole, gourde,. Gourde redirects here For other uses see Gourde disambiguation HTG redirects here For other uses see HTG disambiguation The gourde French ɡuʁd or goud Haitian Creole ɡud is the currency of Haiti Its ISO 4217 code is HTG and it is divided into 100 centimes French or santim Creole Haitian gourdegourde haitienne French goud ayisyen Haitian Creole ISO 4217CodeHTG numeric 332 Subunit0 01UnitSymbolG DenominationsSuperunit 5Dollar Subunit 5 100Penny p 1 100Centime c Banknotes Freq usedG 10 G 25 G 50 G 100 G 250 G 500 Rarely usedG 1 G 2 G 5 G 20 G 1 000Coins5c 10c 20c 50c G 1 G 5DemographicsUser s HaitiIssuanceCentral bankBanque de la Republique d Haiti Websitewww wbr brh wbr htValuationInflation22 8 SourceThe Global Economy 2020Republique d Haiti 10 Gourdes 1827 The word gourde is a French cognate for the Spanish term gordo from the pesos gordos also known in English as hard pieces of eight and in French as piastres fortes espagnoles in which colonial era contracts within the Spanish sphere of influence were often denominated 1 Contents 1 First gourde 1813 1870 1 1 Coins 1 2 Banknotes 2 Second gourde 1870 1872 3 Third gourde 1872 present 3 1 Coins 3 2 Banknotes 3 3 Biccentenial of the Independence 1804 2004 series 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFirst gourde 1813 1870 editThe first gourde was introduced in 1813 and replaced the livre at a rate of G 1 8 livres and 5 sous Coins edit The first issues of coins were silver pieces of 6 12 and 25 centimes The Haitian government attempted to make money by declaring a much higher value to their coins than the intrinsic value of the metal In 1827 50c and 100c coins were introduced followed by 1c and 2c in 1828 In 1846 and 1850 6 1 4 c coins were issued as well as 6c coins In 1863 bronze coins produced by the Heaton mint of Birmingham were issued These were in denominations of 5c 10c and 20c and were the last coins of the first gourde Banknotes edit The governments of Haiti issued paper money in denominations of G 1 G 2 G 5 G 10 G 20 G 25 G 50 G 100 G 500 and G 1 000 Second gourde 1870 1872 editIn 1870 the gourde was revalued at a rate of ten to one Only banknotes were issued for this second gourde with the government issuing notes of G 10 and G 25 Third gourde 1872 present editIn 1872 the gourde was again revalued this time at a rate of three hundred to one In the early years of this third gourde only banknotes were being issued and the name piastre was sometimes used instead of gourde especially on a banknote issue dated 1875 In 1881 the gourde was linked to the French franc at F 5 G 1 and coin production recommenced The peg to the franc did not last however In 1912 the gourde was pegged to the US dollar at a value of G 5 to US 1 although this peg was also abandoned in 1989 and the currency now floats Due to the old link G 5 is often referred to as a Haitian dollar and 5c is called a Haitian penny citation needed Indeed in many places prices are given not in gourdes but rather in Haitian dollars which must be multiplied by five to convert to gourdes citation needed Coins edit 10 centimes 1949 nbsp Dumarsais Estime Coat of armsThe 1881 issue of coins consisted of denominations of 1c 2c 10c 20c and 50c and G 1 5c coins were added in 1889 Production of the 1c and 2c and G 1 pieces ceased in the mid 1890s whilst coin production ceased entirely from 1908 until 1949 when 5c and 10c coins were again minted These were followed by 20c pieces in 1956 50c in 1972 and G 1 and G 5 in 1995 Coins currently in circulation are 50c G 1 G 5Banknotes edit nbsp Banque nationale de la Republique d Haiti 1 gourde 1916 In 1875 citation needed banknotes were issued by the National Bank of Haiti in denominations of 25c 1 and 5 piastres equal to the gourde Following this banknotes were issued in denominations ranging from 10c to G 5 by the various Haitian governments until 1916 when the National Bank of the Republic of Haiti BNRH began issuing notes In 1920 G 1 G 2 G 5 G 10 and G 20 notes were issued with G 50 and G 100 added in 1925 In the 1970s G 25 G 250 and G 500 notes were introduced In 1979 the Bank of the Republic of Haiti replaced the BNRH as the paper money issuing body A 1 000 gourde note was introduced in 1999 to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the founding of Port au Prince A G 20 note was released into circulation in 2001 both as a commemorative to celebrate the bicentennial of the Constitution of Toussaint L Ouverture and as a regular issue In 2004 the Bank of the Republic of Haiti issued a series of notes to commemorate the bicentennial of Haiti Banknotes currently in circulation are G 10 G 25 G 50 G 100 G 250 G 500 G 1 000Older seriesImage Value Obverse Reverse Year 1 G 10 Catherine Flon Arcahaie sewing the first flag of Haiti 1803 Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 2 G 20 Francois Dominique Toussaint l Ouverture Constitution of Haiti 2001 3 G 25 The Palace of Justice in Port au Prince Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 4 G 50 Lysius Felicite Salomon Jeune Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 5 G 100 Henri Christophe President of Northern Haiti later King Henri I of Haiti Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 6 G 250 Jean Jacques Dessalines Emperor Jacques I of Haiti Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 7 G 500 Alexandre Sabes Petion President of Southern Haiti Coat of arms of Haiti 2000 8 G 1 000 President Florvil Hyppolite Marche Valliere 1999Commemorative banknotes of the Haitian gourdeImage Value Obverse Reverse Anotations Year 9 G 20 Francois Dominique Toussaint Louverture Constitution of Haiti of 1801 Commemorative text on the watermark area of the note gold foil strip on the right edge of the note slightly curved serial numbers on either side of the front of the note 2001Biccentenial of the Independence 1804 2004 series edit Biccentenial of the Independence 1804 2004 currently in circulationImage Value Obverse Reverse Year 10 G 10 Dix Gourdes Dis Goud Sanite Belair Attack and take of the Crete a Pierrot Fort Cap Rouge Jacmel 2004 11 G 25 Vingt Cinq Gourdes Vennsenk Goud General Nicolas Geffrard Governor of Southern Haiti Des Platons fortress Dussis 2004 12 G 50 Cinquante Gourdes Senkant Goud Francois Cappoix Fort Jalousiere Marmelade 2004 13 G 100 Cent Gourdes San Goud Henri Christophe President of Northern Haiti later King Henri I of Haiti Invasion of Cape Haitian by the French army Henry Citadel Milot 2004 14 G 250 Deux Cent Cinquante gourdes Desan Senkant Goud Jean Jacques Dessalines Emperor Jacques I of Haiti Fort Decide Marchand 2004 15 G 500 Cinq Cent Gourdes Senksan Goud Alexandre Sabes Petion President of Southern Haiti Fort Jacques Fermathe 2004 16 G 1 000 President Florvil Hyppolite Marche Valliere 1999Note The G 1 G 2 G 5 G 20 notes are no longer produced and are no longer in circulation Current HTG 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 USDSee also editCentral banks and currencies of the Caribbean Economy of HaitiReferences edit 3310 Monnaie de la Republique d Haiti Haiti Reference External links editFacsimiles of Haitian banknotes Coins of Haiti Archived 2014 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Portals nbsp Caribbean nbsp Haiti nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haitian gourde amp oldid 1197954350, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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