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Luxembourg franc

The Luxembourg franc (F or ISO LUF, Luxembourgish: Frang), subdivided into 100 centimes, was the currency of Luxembourg between 1854 and 2002, except from 1941 to 1944. From 1944 to 2002, its value was equal to that of the Belgian franc. The franc remained in circulation until 2002, when it was replaced by the euro.

Luxembourg franc
ISO 4217
CodeLUF
Unit
Unitfranc
Pluralfrancs (French)
Franken (German)
Frang (Luxembourgish)
SymbolF
Denominations
Subunit
1100centime (French)
cent (German)
Plural
centime (French)
cent (German)
centimes (French)
cent (German)
Symbol
centime (French)
cent (German)
Cmes
Banknotes
 Freq. used100F, 1000F, 5000F.1[1]
 Rarely used20F, 50F
Coins
 Freq. used1F, 5F, 20F & 50F
 Rarely used25 Cmes
Demographics
User(s)None, previously:
 Belgium,
 Luxembourg
(both alongside Belgian Franc)
Issuance
Central bankInstitut Monétaire Luxembourgeois (1984-1999)
Central Bank of Luxembourg (1999-2001)
 Websitewww.bcl.lu
Printer
 Websitewww.delarue.com
Valuation
Pegged withBelgian franc at par
EU Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM)
Since13 March 1979
Fixed rate since31 December 1998
Replaced by euro, non cash1 January 1999
Replaced by euro, cash1 January 2002
1 € =40.3399F
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.
1Belgian franc coins were also used
2Belgian franc notes (including 10,000 fr.) were also used

History edit

The conquest of most of western Europe by Revolutionary and Napoleonic France led to the French franc's wide circulation, including in Luxembourg. However, incorporation into the Netherlands in 1815 resulted in the Dutch guilder becoming Luxembourg's currency. Following Belgium's independence from the Netherlands, the Belgian franc was adopted in 1839 and circulated in Luxembourg until 1842 and again from 1848. Between 1842 and 1848, Luxembourg (as part of the German Zollverein) used the Prussian Thaler.

In 1854, Luxembourg began issuing its own franc, at par with the Belgian franc (BF/FB). The Luxembourg franc followed the Belgian franc into the Latin Monetary Union in 1865. In 1926, Belgium withdrew from the Latin Monetary Union. However, the 1921 monetary union of Belgium and Luxembourg survived, forming the basis for the full Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union in 1932. In 1935, the link between the Luxembourg and Belgian francs was revised, with 1F = 1+14 BF.

In May 1940, the franc was pegged to the German Reichsmark at a rate of 4 francs = 1 Reichsmark. This was changed to 10F = 1 Reichsmark in July 1940. On 26 August 1940, the Reichsmark was declared legal tender in Luxembourg and on 20 January 1941, the Reichsmark was declared the only legal tender, and the franc was abolished.[4] The Luxembourg franc was reestablished in 1944, once more tied to the Belgian franc at par.

In August 1993, the European Exchange Rate Mechanism expanded its intervention margin to 15% to accommodate speculation against the French franc and other currencies. As a contingency measure against the pression this generated on European currencies, the Finance Minister, Jean-Claude Juncker, secretly had a new series of Luxembourg franc notes printed. The new currency which would not be pegged to the Belgian franc. As a security measure, the notes depicted Grand Duchess Charlotte, who had died in 1985. This was done to preserve the secret, as Juncker believed that nobody would believe that new banknotes would feature a former monarch. Besides Juncker, only Grand Duke Jean and Prime Minister Jacques Santer were aware of the scheme. The notes were never used, and were burned by the Army in 1999 on the day that the euro was introduced. In 2019, Juncker, by then President of the European Commission, made the story public at a European Central Bank meeting.[5]

The Luxembourg franc was fixed at €1 = 40.3399F on 1 January 1999. From 1999 to 2002, the franc was officially a subdivision of the euro (€1 = 40.3399F), but the euro did not circulate in physical form before 1 January 2002. Under the principle of "no obligation and no prohibition", financial transactions could be conducted in euros and francs, but physical payments could be made only in francs, as euro notes and coins were not available yet. Euro coins and banknotes were introduced on 1 January 2002. Old franc coins and notes lost their legal tender status on 28 February 2002.

Use of Belgian franc edit

Between 1944 and 2002, 1 Luxembourg franc was equal to 1 Belgian franc. Belgian francs were legal tender in Luxembourg, and Luxembourg francs were legal tender in Belgium. Nevertheless, payments in Luxembourg banknotes were commonly refused by shopkeepers in Belgium, either through ignorance or from fear that their other customers would refuse the banknotes (again, either through ignorance or from fear of being denied payment with it later), forcing them to go through the hassle of a trip to their bank to redeem the value of the banknote.[citation needed]

With a few early exceptions, the coins were identical in size, shape, and composition. Although they had distinct designs, the coins circulated in both Luxembourg and Belgium.

Coins edit

The first coins were issued in 1854, in denominations of 2+12, 5 and 10 centimes. In 1901, the bronze 5- and 10-centime pieces were replaced by cupro-nickel coins. In 1915–1916, zinc 5-, 10- and 25-centime coins were issued by the occupying German forces. After the First World War, iron coins were issued in the same denominations before cupronickel was reintroduced in 1924, along with nickel 1- and 2-franc coins. The franc coins bore the inscription "Bon Pour", implying that they were tokens "good for" 1 or 2 francs. Such inscriptions also appeared on contemporary French and Belgian coins.

In 1929, Luxembourg's first silver coins since the late 18th century were issued, 5 and 10 francs. Bronze 5, 10 (smaller than earlier issues) and 25 centimes and nickel 50 centimes were introduced in 1930. The last coins before World War II were cupronickel 25-centime and 1-franc pieces issued in 1938 and 1939.

 
 
Post-war Luxembourgish 25 centimes coin, minted in 1947

The first coins issued after the war were bronze 25-centime and cupro-nickel 1-franc coins introduced in 1946. These were followed by cupronickel 5-franc coins in 1949. In 1952, the size of the 1-franc (€0.02) coin was reduced to match that of the Belgian 1-franc coin introduced in 1950. From this time on, all new Luxembourg coins matched the sizes and compositions of their Belgian counterparts, although the 25-centime (€0.01) coin was not changed to match the Belgian counterpart introduced in 1964. In 1971, nickel 10-franc (€0.25) coins were introduced, followed by bronze 20-franc (€0.50) coins in 1980 and nickel 50-franc (€1.24) coins in 1987. The size and composition of the 1- and 5-franc coins were again altered in 1988 and 1986 respectively to match their Belgian counterparts.

A combination of being a small population and with Belgian coins so abundantly circulating in Luxembourg meant it was seldom necessary for Luxembourg to issue coinage on a year by year basis, especially in later years during design changes when large numbers of coins were minted in Brussels to supply the small country for many years at a time. As a result, some dates appear in mint sets only while many other dates saw no standard issue coins minted at all. Many earlier dates changed frequently with larger denominations often being single year designs.

Banknotes edit

 
10 Luxembourg franc banknote, 1924.
 
20 Luxembourg franc banknote.

Before the First World War, notes were issued by the Banque Internationale à Luxembourg (BIL) and the National Bank, denominated in Thaler, Mark and, occasionally, francs, with an exchange rate of 1 franc = 80 Pfennig (the relative gold standards would have implied a rate of 1 franc = 81 Pfennig) used on bi-currency notes.

In 1914, State Treasury notes were issued. The first series was denominated in francs and Mark but these were the last Luxembourg notes to feature the German currency. Denominations were of 1, 2, 5, 25 and 125 francs (80 Pfennig, 1.6, 4, 20 and 100 Mark). In 1919, a second series of State Treasury notes was issued, with new denominations of 50 centimes and 500 francs. In 1923, the BIL issued the first of several types of 100-franc notes which continued until the 1980s. In 1932, the state introduced 50-franc notes, followed by 1000-franc notes in 1940.

In 1944, following liberation, the franc was reintroduced with a new series of notes in denominations of 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 francs. The 5-franc notes were replaced by coins in 1949, followed by the 10-franc notes in 1971, the 20-franc notes in 1980 and the 50-franc notes in 1987.

In 1985, the Institut Monétaire Luxembourgeois took over paper money issuance from the government and issued the first post-war 1000-franc notes {€24.79}. These were followed by 100-franc notes {€2.48} in 1986 and 5000-franc notes {€123.95} in 1993.

Banknotes of the Luxembourg franc (1985–1996 issue)
Image Value Equivalent in euros Color Size Obverse Reverse Year of introduction
100 LUF €2.48 Red 142 × 76 mm Grand Duke Jean, Grand Ducal Palace in Luxembourg City Luxembourg City 1986
1000 LUF €24.79 Brown 154 × 76 mm Grand Duke Jean, Vianden Castle Echternach 1985
5000 LUF €123.95 Green 160 × 76 mm Grand Duke Jean, Clervaux Castle Old map of Luxembourg City, European center in Kirchberg 1993

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 November 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2008. Coins from Banque Centrale du Luxembourg
  2. ^ "Banque centrale du Luxembourg - the banknotes denominated in Luxembourg francs".
  3. ^ "Banque centrale du Luxembourg - the banknotes denominated in Luxembourg francs".
  4. ^ . Global Financial Data. Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 28 February 2007.
  5. ^ "Press release - Speech by President Juncker at the European Central Bank Forum on Central Banking 2019 celebrating 20 years of the Economic and Monetary Union, 'Building the euro: moments in time, lessons in history'". European Commission. Retrieved 21 June 2019.

External links edit

  • Overview of franc of Luxembourg from the BBC
  • Historical banknotes of Luxembourg (in English and German)
  • All FLUX Notes
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Preceded by Luxembourgish currency
1854-1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by Luxembourgish currency
1944-19991
Succeeded by

luxembourg, franc, luxembourgish, frang, subdivided, into, centimes, currency, luxembourg, between, 1854, 2002, except, from, 1941, 1944, from, 1944, 2002, value, equal, that, belgian, franc, franc, remained, circulation, until, 2002, when, replaced, euro, fra. The Luxembourg franc F or ISO LUF Luxembourgish Frang subdivided into 100 centimes was the currency of Luxembourg between 1854 and 2002 except from 1941 to 1944 From 1944 to 2002 its value was equal to that of the Belgian franc The franc remained in circulation until 2002 when it was replaced by the euro Luxembourg francfranc luxembourgeois French Luxemburger Franken German Letzebuerger Frang Luxembourgish ISO 4217CodeLUFUnitUnitfrancPluralfrancs French Franken German Frang Luxembourgish SymbolF DenominationsSubunit 1 100centime French cent German Plural centime French cent German centimes French cent German Symbol centime French cent German CmesBanknotes Freq used100F 1000F 5000F 1 1 Rarely used20F 50FCoins Freq used1F 5F 20F amp 50F Rarely used25 CmesDemographicsUser s None previously Belgium Luxembourg both alongside Belgian Franc IssuanceCentral bankInstitut Monetaire Luxembourgeois 1984 1999 Central Bank of Luxembourg 1999 2001 Websitewww wbr bcl wbr luPrinterBradbury Wilkinson and Company 2 De La Rue 3 Websitewww wbr delarue wbr comValuationPegged withBelgian franc at parEU Exchange Rate Mechanism ERM Since13 March 1979Fixed rate since31 December 1998Replaced by euro non cash1 January 1999Replaced by euro cash1 January 20021 40 3399FThis infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete 1Belgian franc coins were also used 2Belgian franc notes including 10 000 fr were also used Contents 1 History 2 Use of Belgian franc 3 Coins 4 Banknotes 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editFor an earlier currency of Luxembourg see Luxembourg livre The conquest of most of western Europe by Revolutionary and Napoleonic France led to the French franc s wide circulation including in Luxembourg However incorporation into the Netherlands in 1815 resulted in the Dutch guilder becoming Luxembourg s currency Following Belgium s independence from the Netherlands the Belgian franc was adopted in 1839 and circulated in Luxembourg until 1842 and again from 1848 Between 1842 and 1848 Luxembourg as part of the German Zollverein used the Prussian Thaler In 1854 Luxembourg began issuing its own franc at par with the Belgian franc BF FB The Luxembourg franc followed the Belgian franc into the Latin Monetary Union in 1865 In 1926 Belgium withdrew from the Latin Monetary Union However the 1921 monetary union of Belgium and Luxembourg survived forming the basis for the full Belgium Luxembourg Economic Union in 1932 In 1935 the link between the Luxembourg and Belgian francs was revised with 1F 1 1 4 BF In May 1940 the franc was pegged to the German Reichsmark at a rate of 4 francs 1 Reichsmark This was changed to 10F 1 Reichsmark in July 1940 On 26 August 1940 the Reichsmark was declared legal tender in Luxembourg and on 20 January 1941 the Reichsmark was declared the only legal tender and the franc was abolished 4 The Luxembourg franc was reestablished in 1944 once more tied to the Belgian franc at par In August 1993 the European Exchange Rate Mechanism expanded its intervention margin to 15 to accommodate speculation against the French franc and other currencies As a contingency measure against the pression this generated on European currencies the Finance Minister Jean Claude Juncker secretly had a new series of Luxembourg franc notes printed The new currency which would not be pegged to the Belgian franc As a security measure the notes depicted Grand Duchess Charlotte who had died in 1985 This was done to preserve the secret as Juncker believed that nobody would believe that new banknotes would feature a former monarch Besides Juncker only Grand Duke Jean and Prime Minister Jacques Santer were aware of the scheme The notes were never used and were burned by the Army in 1999 on the day that the euro was introduced In 2019 Juncker by then President of the European Commission made the story public at a European Central Bank meeting 5 The Luxembourg franc was fixed at 1 40 3399F on 1 January 1999 From 1999 to 2002 the franc was officially a subdivision of the euro 1 40 3399F but the euro did not circulate in physical form before 1 January 2002 Under the principle of no obligation and no prohibition financial transactions could be conducted in euros and francs but physical payments could be made only in francs as euro notes and coins were not available yet Euro coins and banknotes were introduced on 1 January 2002 Old franc coins and notes lost their legal tender status on 28 February 2002 Use of Belgian franc editBetween 1944 and 2002 1 Luxembourg franc was equal to 1 Belgian franc Belgian francs were legal tender in Luxembourg and Luxembourg francs were legal tender in Belgium Nevertheless payments in Luxembourg banknotes were commonly refused by shopkeepers in Belgium either through ignorance or from fear that their other customers would refuse the banknotes again either through ignorance or from fear of being denied payment with it later forcing them to go through the hassle of a trip to their bank to redeem the value of the banknote citation needed With a few early exceptions the coins were identical in size shape and composition Although they had distinct designs the coins circulated in both Luxembourg and Belgium Coins editThe first coins were issued in 1854 in denominations of 2 1 2 5 and 10 centimes In 1901 the bronze 5 and 10 centime pieces were replaced by cupro nickel coins In 1915 1916 zinc 5 10 and 25 centime coins were issued by the occupying German forces After the First World War iron coins were issued in the same denominations before cupronickel was reintroduced in 1924 along with nickel 1 and 2 franc coins The franc coins bore the inscription Bon Pour implying that they were tokens good for 1 or 2 francs Such inscriptions also appeared on contemporary French and Belgian coins In 1929 Luxembourg s first silver coins since the late 18th century were issued 5 and 10 francs Bronze 5 10 smaller than earlier issues and 25 centimes and nickel 50 centimes were introduced in 1930 The last coins before World War II were cupronickel 25 centime and 1 franc pieces issued in 1938 and 1939 nbsp nbsp Post war Luxembourgish 25 centimes coin minted in 1947 The first coins issued after the war were bronze 25 centime and cupro nickel 1 franc coins introduced in 1946 These were followed by cupronickel 5 franc coins in 1949 In 1952 the size of the 1 franc 0 02 coin was reduced to match that of the Belgian 1 franc coin introduced in 1950 From this time on all new Luxembourg coins matched the sizes and compositions of their Belgian counterparts although the 25 centime 0 01 coin was not changed to match the Belgian counterpart introduced in 1964 In 1971 nickel 10 franc 0 25 coins were introduced followed by bronze 20 franc 0 50 coins in 1980 and nickel 50 franc 1 24 coins in 1987 The size and composition of the 1 and 5 franc coins were again altered in 1988 and 1986 respectively to match their Belgian counterparts A combination of being a small population and with Belgian coins so abundantly circulating in Luxembourg meant it was seldom necessary for Luxembourg to issue coinage on a year by year basis especially in later years during design changes when large numbers of coins were minted in Brussels to supply the small country for many years at a time As a result some dates appear in mint sets only while many other dates saw no standard issue coins minted at all Many earlier dates changed frequently with larger denominations often being single year designs Banknotes edit nbsp 10 Luxembourg franc banknote 1924 nbsp 20 Luxembourg franc banknote Before the First World War notes were issued by the Banque Internationale a Luxembourg BIL and the National Bank denominated in Thaler Mark and occasionally francs with an exchange rate of 1 franc 80 Pfennig the relative gold standards would have implied a rate of 1 franc 81 Pfennig used on bi currency notes In 1914 State Treasury notes were issued The first series was denominated in francs and Mark but these were the last Luxembourg notes to feature the German currency Denominations were of 1 2 5 25 and 125 francs 80 Pfennig 1 6 4 20 and 100 Mark In 1919 a second series of State Treasury notes was issued with new denominations of 50 centimes and 500 francs In 1923 the BIL issued the first of several types of 100 franc notes which continued until the 1980s In 1932 the state introduced 50 franc notes followed by 1000 franc notes in 1940 In 1944 following liberation the franc was reintroduced with a new series of notes in denominations of 5 10 20 50 and 100 francs The 5 franc notes were replaced by coins in 1949 followed by the 10 franc notes in 1971 the 20 franc notes in 1980 and the 50 franc notes in 1987 In 1985 the Institut Monetaire Luxembourgeois took over paper money issuance from the government and issued the first post war 1000 franc notes 24 79 These were followed by 100 franc notes 2 48 in 1986 and 5000 franc notes 123 95 in 1993 Banknotes of the Luxembourg franc 1985 1996 issue Image Value Equivalent in euros Color Size Obverse Reverse Year of introduction100 LUF 2 48 Red 142 76 mm Grand Duke Jean Grand Ducal Palace in Luxembourg City Luxembourg City 19861000 LUF 24 79 Brown 154 76 mm Grand Duke Jean Vianden Castle Echternach 19855000 LUF 123 95 Green 160 76 mm Grand Duke Jean Clervaux Castle Old map of Luxembourg City European center in Kirchberg 1993See also editEconomy of Luxembourg Luxembourgish euro coinsReferences edit Banque centrale du Luxembourg Luxembourg Francs coins Archived from the original on 14 November 2008 Retrieved 23 November 2008 Coins from Banque Centrale du Luxembourg Banque centrale du Luxembourg the banknotes denominated in Luxembourg francs Banque centrale du Luxembourg the banknotes denominated in Luxembourg francs The Global History of Currencies GHOC An Exclusive Service of Global Financial Data Luxembourg Global Financial Data Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 28 February 2007 Press release Speech by President Juncker at the European Central Bank Forum on Central Banking 2019 celebrating 20 years of the Economic and Monetary Union Building the euro moments in time lessons in history European Commission Retrieved 21 June 2019 External links editOverview of franc of Luxembourg from the BBC Historical banknotes of Luxembourg in English and German All FLUX Notes Preceded byBelgian franc Luxembourgish currency1854 1941 Succeeded byGerman ReichsmarkPreceded byGerman Reichsmark Luxembourgish currency1944 19991 Succeeded byEuro Portals nbsp Europe nbsp Luxembourg nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luxembourg franc amp oldid 1184580400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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