Croatian kuna explained

Local Name:Hrvatska kuna
Local Name Lang:hr
Image 1:500 kuna banknote obverse.jpg
Image Title 1:500 kuna banknote
Iso Code:HRK
Date Of Introduction:30 May 1994
Using Countries:None, previously:
Inflation Rate:1.3% (August 2018)[1]
Inflation Source Date:Croatian Bureau of Statistics, September 2018
Inflation Method:CPI
Pegged With:Euro (EUR)
1 EUR = 7.53450 HRK
Erm Since:10 July 2020
Euro Replace Non Cash:1 January 2023
Euro Replace Cash:14 January 2023
Replaced Currency:Croatian dinar
Erm Fixed Rate:7.53450 kn[2]
Erm Band:15.0%
Subunit Name 1:lipa
Symbol:kn
Symbol Subunit 1:lp
Plural:kune (2-4)
kuna (higher amounts, nominative)
Plural Slavic:Kuna, Kune
Frequently Used Coins:5, 10, 20, 50 lp, 1, 2, 5 kn
Rarely Used Coins:1, 2 lp, 25 kn
Frequently Used Banknotes:10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500 kn
Rarely Used Banknotes:5, 1000 kn
Issuing Authority:Croatian National Bank
Printer:Giesecke & Devrient
Mint:Croatian Mint
Obsolete:yes

The kuna (in Croatian pronounced as /kǔːna/; sign: kn; code: HRK) was the currency of Croatia from 1994 until 2023, when it was replaced by the euro. The kuna was subdivided into 100 lipa. It was issued by the Croatian National Bank and the coins were minted by the Croatian Mint.

In the Croatian language, the word Croatian: kuna means and Croatian: lipa means, both references to their historical use in medieval trading.

History and etymology

See main article: History of Croatian currency. Records exist from the Middle Ages of a tax and/or a currency in the then highly valued marten skins, which were recorded as marturina ("marten tax") or kunovina, in Lower Pannonia, modern day Hungary and Slavonia. Slavonia's first minted currency was the frizatik,[3] but in the 13th century the Ban of Slavonia issued a marten-adorned silver coin called the banovac.[4] [5]

The idea of a kuna currency reappeared in 1939 when the Banovina of Croatia, an autonomous province established within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, planned to issue its own money, along with the Yugoslav dinar.[6] In 1941, when the Ustaše regime formed the Independent State of Croatia, they used the kuna as its currency. It remained in circulation until 1945, when Croatia became part of SFR Yugoslavia and the Yugoslav dinar became the official currency.

The plural form of kuna in Croatian is kune.[7] It can vary because of different number declension rules (e.g. 2 kune, 10 kuna).

It has no relation to the various Slavic currencies named "koruna" (translated as kruna in Croatian), which means "crown".

Modern currency

The modern kuna was introduced on 30 May 1994, starting a period of transition from the Croatian dinar, introduced in 1991, which ended on 31 December 1994.[8] One kuna was equivalent to 1,000 dinars at a fixed exchange rate. The kuna was pegged to the Deutsche Mark from the start. With the replacement of the mark by the euro, the kuna's peg effectively switched to the euro.

The choice of the name kuna was controversial because the same currency name had been used by the Independent State of Croatia, but this was dismissed as a red herring, since the same name was also in use during the Banovina of Croatia and by the State Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH). An alternative proposal for the name of the new currency was kruna (crown), divided into 100 banica (viceroy's wife), but this was deemed too similar to the Austro-Hungarian krone and found inappropriate for the country which is a republic,[9] even though Czechia and (until 2008) Slovakia have used currencies whose names translate to "crown".

A long-time policy of the Croatian National Bank was to keep the fluctuations of the kuna's exchange rate against the euro (or, previously, the mark) within a relatively stable range. Since the introduction of the euro in 1999, the exchange rate between the two currencies rarely fluctuated to a substantial degree, remaining at a near constant 7.5:1 (HRK to EUR) rate. Croatia joined the European Union on 1 July 2013 and the Exchange Rate Mechanism on 10 July 2020 at a rate of 7.53450 HRK to €1.[10] [11]

The kuna was replaced by the euro on 1 January 2023 after satisfying prerequisites[12] as the initial time estimate of standard four years after joining the European Union proved too short.[13]

A two-week transition period during which kuna cash remained as legal tender in circulation alongside the euro ended on 14 January. Cash could be exchanged at any eurozone national central banks until 28 February and at any bank (Fina and Hrvatska pošta in Croatia) until the end of 2023 at no charge. The Croatian National Bank will do the same for notes indefinitely and for coins until the end of 2025.[14] [15]

Coins

In 1994, coins were introduced in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 lipa, 1, 2, 5 and 25 kuna. The coins are issued in two versions: one with the name of the plant or animal in Croatian (issued in odd years), the other with the name in Latin (issued in even years). Overall more coins have been minted with Croatian names than with names in Latin.[16]

Lipa is the Croatian word for linden or tilia tree, a species that was traditionally planted around marketplaces in Croatia and other lands under Habsburg monarchy rule during the early modern period.

Due to their low value, 1 and 2 lipa coins were rarely used.[17] Since 2009, these coins were no longer minted, but the Croatian National Bank stated that it had no plans for withdrawing them, and the 1 and 2 lipa coins were still minted as non-circulating, mainly for numismatic collections.[18]

Coins intended for circulation[19] In each case, the obverse shows the coat of arms, state title and an indication of value.
Value Technical parameters Description Date of
issue
In KunaEquivalent in Euros ()Diameter Mass Composition Edge Reverse First
minting
1 lp€0.001327217.0 mm0.70 gAluminium-Magnesium alloySmoothMaize, "KUKURUZ" or "ZEA MAYS", year of minting199331 May 1994
2 lp€0.002654519.0 mm0.92 gAluminium-Magnesium alloySmoothGrapevine, "VINOVA LOZA" or "VITIS VINIFERA", year of minting199331 May 1994
5 lp€0.00663618.0 mm2.50 gBronze-plated steelSmoothEuropean oak branch, "HRAST LUŽNJAK" or "QUERCUS ROBUR", year of minting199331 May 1994
10 lp€0.01327220.0 mm3.25 gBronze-plated steelSmoothTobacco plant, "DUHAN" or "NICOTIANA TABACUM", year of minting199331 May 1994
20 lp€0.02654518.5 mm2.90 gNickel-plated steelSmoothOlive branch, "MASLINA" or "OLEA EUROPAEA", year of minting199331 May 1994
50 lp€0.0663620.5 mm3.65 gNickel-plated steelSmoothDegenia, "VELEBITSKA DEGENIJA" or "DEGENIA VELEBITICA", year of minting199331 May 1994
1 kn€0.1327222.5 mm5.00 gNickel-brassMilledNightingale, "SLAVUJ" or "LUSCINIA MEGARHYNCHOS", year of minting199331 May 1994
2 kn€0.2654524.5 mm6.20 gNickel-brassMilledAtlantic bluefin tuna, "TUNJ" or "THUNNUS THYNNUS", year of minting199331 May 1994
5 kn€0.663626.5 mm7.45 gNickel-brassMilledBrown bear, "MRKI MEDVJED" or "URSUS ARCTOS", year of minting199331 May 1994

Commemorative coins

Commemorative coins of the Croatian were issued between 1995 and 2022.

DenominationObverse DesignDate of issueQuantity
align=center 1 lipaMaize with inscriptions FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), 1945 (year of FAO founding), 1995 (50th anniversary of FAO and issue year of coin) and fiat panis (Latin expression for "Let there be bread!")align=center 15 July 1995align=center 1,000,000
align=center 2 lipeEmblem of the Croatian Olympic Committee with inscriptions 1996 (Olympic Games year and issue year of coin), Atlanta (host city of the 1996 Olympic Games) and Olimpijske igre (Croatian for Olympic Games)align=center 1 July 1996align=center 1,000,000
align=center 5 lipaEmblem of the Croatian Olympic Committee with inscriptions 1996 (Olympic Games year and issue year of coin), Atlanta (host city of the 1996 Olympic Games) and Olimpijske igre (Croatian for Olympic Games)align=center 1 July 1996align=center 900,000
align=center 10 lipaEmblem of the United Nations with inscriptions Organizacija ujedinjenih naroda (Croatian for United Nations Organization), 1945 (founding year of United Nations), and 1995 (50th anniversary of United Nations and issue year of coin)align=center 1 July 1996align=center 900,000
align=center 20 lipaOlive with inscriptions FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), 1945 (year of FAO founding), 1995 (50th anniversary of FAO and issue year of coin) and fiat panis (Latin expression for "Let there be bread!")align=center 15 July 1995align=center 1,000,000
align=center 50 lipaEmblem of the Croatian Football Federation with inscriptions Europsko nogometno prvenstvo (Croatian for European Football Championship), Engleska (Croatian for England), and 1996 (European Championship year and issue year of coin)align=center 12 June 1996align=center 900,000
align=center 1 kunaEmblem of the Croatian Olympic Committee with inscriptions 1996 (Olympic Games year and issue year of coin), Atlanta (host city of the 1996 Olympic Games) and Olimpijske igre (Croatian for Olympic Games)align=center 1 July 1996align=center 1,000,000
align=center 2 kuneTuna with inscriptions FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), 1945 (year of FAO founding), 1995 (50th anniversary of FAO and issue year of coin) and fiat panis (Latin expression for "Let there be bread!")align=center 15 July 1995align=center 500,000
align=center 5 kunaImages commemorating the 500th anniversary of the printing of the Breviary of Senj in 1494align=center 15 July 1995align=center 1,000,000
25 kunaMarking the completion of the peaceful reintegration the Republic of Croatia territory under the temporary administration of UNTAESalign=center 28 May 1997align=center 300,000
Holding of the first Croatian Esperanto Congress, in Zagreb, on 31 May and 1 June 1997align=center 24 June 1997align=center 300,000
Marking the 5th anniversary (1992 - 1997) of the admission of the Republic of Croatia, as an independent and recognised state, into the United Nations Organisationalign=center 27 October 1997 align=center 300,000
Holding of the EXPO, the Lisbon World Exposition, with Croatia as first-time participantalign=center 26 June 1998align=center 300,000
The introduction of the new monetary unit, the euro, in eleven European Union Member Statesalign=center 29 December 1999align=center 300,000
Marking the year 2000, "the Millennium Year"align=center 27 November 2000align=center 300,000
The 10th anniversary of the international recognition of the Republic of Croatia, 15 January 1992 - 15 January 2002align=center 4 August 2005align=center 200,000
The Republic of Croatia becoming an EU membership candidate, 18 June 2004align=center 4 August 2005align=center 30,000
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Annual Meeting, Zagreb, 14 and 15 May 2010align=center 12 May 2010align=center 20,000
Signing the Treaty of Accession of the Republic of Croatia to the European Union, 9 December 2011align=center 3 December 2012align=center 20,000
The Republic of Croatia becoming a full member of the European Union, 1 July 2013align=center 1 July 2013align=center 20,000
The 25th anniversary of independence of the Republic of Croatia, 8 October 1991 – 8 October 2016align=center 7 October 2016align=center 50,000
The 25th anniversary of the admission of the Republic of Croatia to membership in the United Nationsalign=center 22 May 2017align=center 20,000
The 25th anniversary of the introduction of the kuna as the monetary unit of the Republic of Croatia, 30 May 1994 – 30 May 2019align=center 30 May 2019align=center 30,000
The 350th anniversary of the founding of the University of Zagreb, 1669 − 2019align=center 4 November 2019align=center 20,000
The Croatian Presidency of the Council of the EU 2020align=center 15 January 2020align=center 30,000
The 75th anniversary of the founding of the Croatian Association of Technical Culture, 1946 – 2021align=center 23 June 2021align=center 50,000
Marking World Children's Day, 20 November 2021align=center 19 November 2021align=center 50,000
Marking the opening of the Pelješac Bridge for traffic and road connections in the territory of the Republic of Croatiaalign=center 26 July 2022align=center 30,000

Banknotes

The notes were designed by Miroslav Šutej and, and all feature prominent Croatians on front and architectural motifs on back. The geometric figures at lower left on front (except the 5-kuna note) are intaglio printed for recognition by the blind people. To the right of the coat of arms on front is a microprinted version of the Croatian national anthem, Lijepa naša domovino (Our Beautiful Homeland).[20] The overall design is reminiscent of Deutsche Mark banknotes of the fourth series.

The first series of notes was dated 31 October 1993. The 5, 10 and 20 kuna notes from this series were withdrawn on 1 April 2007, and the 50, 100 and 200 kuna notes were withdrawn on 1 January 2010, but remain exchangeable at the HNB in Zagreb.[21]

New series of notes with tweaked, but similar designs and improved security features were released in 2001, 2004, 2012 and 2014.[22]

+ kuna banknotes[23]
ValueDimensions Main Colour Description Date of
In kunaEquivalent in euros ()Obverse Reverse Printing Issue
5 kuna€0.66122×61 mmGreenFran Krsto Frankopan
and Petar Zrinski
The Old Fort and layout of the old Varaždin castle.7 March 20019 July 2001
10 kuna€1.33126×63 mmGreen-BrownBishop Juraj DobrilaThe Pula Arena and Motovun town layout.7 March 2001
9 July 2012
18 June 2001
18 March 2013
20 kuna€2.65130×65 mmRedBan Josip JelačićThe Eltz Manor in Vukovar and the Vučedol Dove.7 March 2001
9 July 2012
16 August 2001
18 March 2013
50 kuna€6.64134×67 mmBlueIvan GundulićThe Old City of Dubrovnik and its Rector's Palace.7 March 2002
9 July 2012
25 November 2002
25 September 2017
100 kuna€13.27138×69 mmOrangeBan Ivan Mažuranić
and the Baška tablet
St. Vitus Cathedral in Rijeka and its layout.7 March 2002
9 July 2012
3 June 2002
1 July 2013
200 kuna€26.54142×71 mmBrownStjepan RadićThe old General Command building in Osijek
and layout of the City-fortress of Tvrđa.
7 March 2002
9 July 2012
12 August 2002
1 July 2013
500 kuna€66.36146×73 mmOlive greenMarko MarulićDiocletian's Palace in Split and
the motif of Croatian ruler from 11th century.
31 October 199330 May 1994
1000 kuna€132.72150×75 mmBlue-Red-GreyAnte StarčevićStatue of King Tomislav and the Zagreb Cathedral.31 October 199330 May 1994
Commemorative issues in circulation
10 kuna€1.33126×63 mmGreen-BrownBishop Juraj DobrilaThe Pula Arena and Motovun town layout.
(10th anniversary issue)
24 May 200430 May 2004
20 kuna€2.65130x65 mmRedBan Josip JelačićThe Eltz Manor in Vukovar and
the Vučedol Dove.
(20th anniversary issue)
30 May 201430 May 2014

See also

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. CONSUMER PRICE INDICES, SEPTEMBER 2019 . 16 December 2019 . . 2019-11-27.
  2. Web site: Communiqué on Croatia . 10 July 2020 . Bank . European Central.
  3. Najsitnija kulturna dobra – Novac i njegova uloga u srednjovjekovnoj Hrvatskoj i Slavoniji . The tiniest cultural goods – Money and its role in medieval Croatia and Slavonia . Ivan . Mirnik . Godišnjak . Ured za kulturna dobra Zagrebačke biskupije . Zagreb . 24 . 2008.
  4. Web site: History of Croatian money . Brozović . Dalibor . Dalibor Brozović . 2011-01-01. - Excerpts from the book Kune and lipe – Currency of the Republic of Croatia, Zagreb, Croatian National Bank
  5. http://www.hnb.hr/novcan/povijest/h-nastavak-3.htm Povijest hrvatskog novca, Section 3
  6. Web site: Prvi novac – Povijest hrvatskog novca – Kraljevina SHS i Nezavisna Država Hrvatska . https://web.archive.org/web/20030421073839/http://www.hnb.hr/novcan/povijest/h-nastavak-4.htm . dead . 2003-04-21 . hr . . 2011-01-01.
  7. Web site: Money in Croatia . Visit Croatia . 3 April 2013 . 18 February 2020.
  8. Croatian Government and Croatian National Bank decisions published in Narodne novine 37/94 http://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/1994_05_37_665.htmlhttp://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/1994_05_37_683.htmlhttp://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/1994_05_37_684.htmlhttp://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/1994_05_37_685.html
  9. Web site: Bogatstvo likovne simbolike hrvatskoga novca . The rich visual symbolism of Croatian currency . Ante . Milinović . Croatian Emigrant Almanac . 2001 . . hr . 2011-01-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110521232159/http://www.matis.hr/zbornici/2001/Text/Text2-4.htm . 2011-05-21.
  10. Web site: Monetary policy and ERM II participation on the path to the euro . . 2004-06-25 . European Central Bank.
  11. News: Vujčić: uvođenje eura dvije, tri godine nakon ulaska u EU . hr . statements made by Boris Vujčić, deputy governor of the Croatian National Bank, at the Dubrovnik economic conference, June 2006 . . 1 July 2006 . . 2011-01-01 . 7 January 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200107193331/http://www.poslovni.hr/vijesti/vujcic-uvoenje-eura-dvije-tri-godine-nakon-ulaska-u-eu-16573 . dead .
  12. Web site: Croatia adopts plan for replacing kuna by euro to protect consumer rights . 9 June 2021 . SeeNews . 23 December 2020 . en.
  13. News: THOMSON . AINSLEY . Croatia Aims for Speedy Adoption of Euro . Wall Street Journal . 4 June 2013 . 7 September 2013.
  14. Web site: Croatia (from 1 January 2023) . European Central Bank . 29 November 2022 . 1 January 2023. Bank . European Central .
  15. Web site: Hoće li se plaćati naknada za zamjenu valute? . Croatian National Bank . 1 January 2023 . hr.
  16. Web site: Kuna lipa – Croatian portal for numismatics . hr . 2013-02-24.
  17. Web site: Otkrivamo: Trgovci zarade 2 milijuna kn godišnje ne vraćajući 1 lipu . . 20 April 2015 . hr . 20 February 2017.
  18. Web site: Zadnja 1 lipa iz 2009., izrada tisuću komada 7,7 puta skuplja od vrijednosti . 7 September 2015 . . hr . 2017-02-20.
  19. Web site: Kune i lipe, kovani novac Republike Hrvatske . Croatian National Bank . hr . 2012-01-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120112120713/http://www.hnb.hr/novcan/hkovanic.htm . 2012-01-12.
  20. Web site: Features of kuna Banknotes . . 23 June 2015 . 29 May 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140609024204/http://www.hnb.hr/novcan/enovcan.htm . 9 June 2014.
  21. Web site: Invalid banknotes – HNB . Hnb.hr . 26 November 2017.
  22. Web site: Banknotes – HNB . Hnb.hr . 26 November 2017 . 29 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180729081953/http://www.hnb.hr/en/currency/banknotes . dead .
  23. Web site: HRVATSKA NARODNA BANKA: Nov?anice i kovanice . 2013-07-05 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130703222905/http://www.hnb.hr/novcan/hnovcan.htm . 2013-07-03.