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Currency

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A currency is a unit of money (or monetary unit). Typically, each country has given monopoly to a single currency, controlled by a state owned central bank, although exceptions from this rule exist. Several countries can use the same name, each for their own currency (e.g. Canadian dollars and US dollars).

Each currency typically has one fraction currency, valued at 1/100 of the main currency: 100 cents = 1 dollar, 100 centimes = 1 franc. These fractions are not listed below.

To find out which currency is used in a particular country, start at the countries of the world.

Currency names of the world in alphabetic order by currency name:


International three letter currency codes are formed by the ISO 3166 country code plus an additional letter. They are, in alphabetic order by code.

  • ATS - Austrian schilling
  • AUD - Australian dollar
  • BEF - Belgian franc
  • CHF - Swiss Franc
  • DEM - Deutch mark
  • DKK - Danish Krone
  • EUR - Euro
  • ESP - Spanish peseta
  • FRF - French Franc
  • FIM - Finnish Markka
  • GBP - United Kingdom Pound
  • IEP - Irish pound
  • ITL - Italian lire
  • LUF - Luxemburg franc
  • NLG - (Dutch) Netherlands guilder
  • NOK - Norwegian Krone
  • PLN - Polish Zloty
  • PTE - Portugese escudo
  • SEK - Swedish Krona
  • USD - United States Dollar

Historic Currencies

Local currency




Wouldn't it be better if the currency codes appeared in parentheses after each country name in the first table? --Pinkunicorn