Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark
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Image:Bosniaconvmark50.jpg Image:Bosnia and Herzegovina 50km rs lice.jpg
The Convertible Mark (Bosnian and Croatian: konvertibilna marka, Serbian: конвертибилна марка), (ISO 4217:BAM) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is divided into 100 feninga (фенинга in Serbian), from the German Pfennige.
It was established as such by the 1995 Dayton Agreement which replaced the former currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina named dinar. The marka in the name refers to the Deutsche Mark, the currency to which it is pegged at a par exchange rate of 1:1. After the Deutsche Mark was absorbed by the Euro in 2002, the currency effectively used the same fixed exchange rate of the Deutsche Mark to Euro (that is €1 = 1.95583 convertible mark/DEM, conversely 1 BAM = €0.511292 ).
The two entities (the Federation and the Republika Srpska) have different banknotes of the same style but with different designs (the person and the symbol on the back is different), however they are interchangeable within the whole country. There is an exception of this is the 200 KM banknote, which has the same design throughout the country.
- 5 feninga/фенинга
- 10 feninga/фенинга
- 20 feninga/фенинга
- 50 feninga/фенинга
- 1 marka/марка
- 2 marke/марке
- 5 maraka/марака
- 50 feninga/фенинга (withdrawn from circulation March 31, 2003)
- 1 marka/марка
- 5 maraka/марака
- 10 maraka/марака
- 20 maraka/марака
- 50 maraka/марака
- 100 maraka/марака
- 200 maraka/марака
See also
External links
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Template:EuropeanCurrenciesbs:Konvertibilna marka ca:Marc convertible cs:Konvertibilní marka da:Konvertibilna mark de:Konvertible Mark el:Μετατρέψιμο μάρκο es:Marco convertible it:Marco convertibile nl:Bosnische convertibele mark ja:兌換マルク pl:Marka transferowa pt:Marco conversível sr:Конвертибилна марка fi:Konvertibilna marka sv:Konvertibilna marka