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In 1963, in order to reset the inflation, the markka was redenominated and replaced by a new markka worth 100 old markkaa. Finland joined the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1948. The value of the markka was pegged to the dollar at 320 mk = US$1, which became New 3.20 mk = US$1 in 1963 and devalued to 4.20 mk = US$1 in 1967. After the breakdown of ...
States using the euro with a bilateral agreement ... Finland: euro [38] € EUR euro cent: markka [39] France: euro [40] € EUR euro cent: franc [41]
European Currency Unit and 22 national currencies which were replaced by the euro: Austrian schilling; Belgian franc; Croatian kuna; Cypriot pound; Dutch guilder; Estonian kroon; Finnish markka; French franc; German mark; Greek drachma; Irish pound; Italian lira; Latvian lats; Lithuanian litas; Luxembourgish franc; Maltese lira; Monégasque ...
This category contains the currencies that were replaced by the euro and directly preceding the euro. Pages in category "Currencies replaced by the euro" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
This category contains all currencies used from 19th century until their replacement by the Euro or other currencies. ... British Columbia dollar; ... Finnish markka;
Currencies with an ISO 4217 code (like "USD "). The currency may be obsolete. The currency may be obsolete. For a list of the codes, see ISO 4217 § Active codes , § Historical codes .
The euro is the result of the European Union's project for economic and monetary union that came fully into being on 1 January 2002 and it is now the currency used by the majority of the European Union's member states, with all but Denmark (which has an opt-out in the EU treaties) bound to adopt it.
The ECU's value was based on the weighted average of a basket of 12 European currencies; the Austrian schilling, Belgian franc, German mark, Spanish peseta, French franc, Finnish markka, Greek drachma, Irish pound, Italian lira, Luxembourgish franc, Dutch guilder, and Portuguese escudo.