Convertible mark

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Bosniaconvmark50.jpg
A 50 konvertibilnih maraka banknote

The convertible mark (bs,hr: konvertibilna marka, sr: конвертибилна марка) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is divided into 100 feninga.

It was established as such by the 1995 Dayton Agreement. The marka in the name refers to the Deutsche Mark, the currency to which it was pegged until 2002 at a par exchange rate of 1:1.

In 2002, following a currency board principle, the currency was put on a fixed exchange rate to the euro.

Coins

Banknotes

External links


Currencies of Europe
Eurozone Euro
Nordic countries Danish krone | Faroese króna | Icelandic króna | Norwegian krone | Swedish krona
Baltic Estonian kroon | Latvian lat | Lithuanian litas
Western Swiss franc | British Pound | Guernsey pound | Isle of Man pound | Jersey pound
Central Czech koruna | Hungarian forint | Polish zloty | Slovak koruna | Slovenian tolar
Eastern Belarusian ruble | Moldovan leu | Russian rouble | Transnistrian rouble | Ukrainian hryvnia
Balkans Albanian lek | Bulgarian lev | Bosnian marka | Croatian kuna | Macedonian denar | Romanian leu | Serbian dinar
Mediterranean Cypriot pound | Gibraltar pound | Maltese lira | New Turkish lira
Transcaucasia Armenian dram | Azeri manat | Georgian lari

See also: Convertible mark, 1995, 2003, Balkans, Baltic region, Banknote, Belarusian ruble, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnian language