Croatian Dinar


The Croatian Dinar was the official currency of Croatia since December 23, 1991 (replacing the Yugoslavian dinar by 1: 1 parity) until May 30, 1994, when the kuna was replaced. The ISO 4217 currency code was HRD.

Croatian Dinar served as a transitional currency after the disconnection of Croatia from Yugoslavia. It was not divided into smaller units, nor had any coins been struck.

All banknotes were identical. There was a portrait of a Raguan scholar, Ruher Bošković. Reverse was dependent on denomination. On banknotes worth 1, 5, 10, 25, 100, 500 and 1000 dinars there was a picture of the cathedral in Zagreb. Highly annotated banknotes (2000, 5000, 10000, 50000 and 100,000 dinars) were introduced in the period of high inflation (1992-1993), with a slightly different appearance and a different reverse, depicting the sculpture by Ivana Meštrović "Croatian History".

The value of the Croatian dinar in 1991-1994 decreased by about 70-fold. In 1994, it was replaced by kuna in the 1000: 1 parity.

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