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Finnish mark

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The markka (or Finnish mark) was the currency used in Finland from 1860 until February 28, 2002, when it ceased to be legal tender and was replaced by the euro (€) introduced January 1. The currency code used for the markka was FIM, and the usual familiar notation was a postfix mk. It was divided into 100 penni. The conversion for one euro was 5.94573 markkaa.

With numbers, Finnish uses the partitive singular forms: "10 markkaa" and "10 penniä".

History

1 markka banknote from 1860
Enlarge
1 markka banknote from 1860

The markka was introduced in 1860 as a quarter of the Russian ruble. In 1865 the markka was separated from the Russian ruble and tied to the value of silver. After Finland gained independence in 1917, the Bank of Finland was founded and the markka was reintroduced as an independent currency backed by gold. The gold standard was abolished in 1940, and the markka suffered heavy inflation during the war years. In 1963 the markka was replaced by the new markka, equivalent to 100 old units.

The name "markka" was based on a medieval unit of weight. Both "markka" and "penni" are loanwords based on the same roots as the German Mark and pfennig.

Although the word "markka" predates the currency by several centuries, the currency was established before being named "markka". A competition was held for its name, and some of the other entries included "sataikko" (meaning "having a hundred parts"), "omena" (apple) and "suomo" (from "Suomi", the Finnish name for Finland).

During the history of the Finnish markka, spanning over 140 years, 28 coins denominated in markka have been minted. The pictorial subjects have changed over the years, but they have all been distinctly Finnish. The Finnish markka is now history, when Finland changed its currency to the euro in 1999 (markka coins and notes were not withdrawn from circulation until 2002).

Portraits in This section covers the last design series of the Finnish markka, designed in the 1980s by Finnish designer Erik Bruun and issued in 1986.
  • 10 markkaa (blue) - Paavo Nurmi (1897–1973), athlete and Olympic winner (note discontinued upon introduction of the 20 markkaa note)
  • 20 markkaa (blue/green) - Väinö Linna (1920–1992), author and novelist (note introduced in 1993)
  • 50 markkaa (brown) - Alvar Aalto (1898–1976), architect
  • 100 markkaa (green) - Jean Sibelius (1865-1957), composer
  • 500 markkaa (red) - Elias Lönnrot (1802-1884), historian
  • 1000 markkaa (blue/purple) - Anders Chydenius (1729-1803), priest and statesman
The series also included a preliminary design for a 5000 markkaa (red/purple) note, depicting priest and linguist Mikael Agricola, but the note was never officially introduced into use.

Earlier banknotes

The second-to-last banknote design series, designed by Tapio Wirkkala, was introduced in 1955 and revised in the reform of 1963. It was the first series to depict actual specific persons. These included Juho Kusti Paasikivi on the 10 markkaa note, J. V. Snellman on the 100 markkaa note and Urho Kekkonen on the 500 markkaa note (introduced later).

Unlike Erik Bruun's series, this series did not depict any other real-life subjects, but only abstract ornaments in addition to the person depictions. A popular joke at the time was to cover Paasikivi's face except for his ear and back of the head on the 10 markkaa note, ending up with something resembling a mouse, said to be the only animal illustration in the entire series.

The still older notes, designed by Eliel Saarinen, were introduced in 1922. They also depicted humans, but these were generic men and women, and did not represent any specific persons. The fact that these men and women were depicted nude caused a minor controversy at the time.

Coins

Markka
1markka1994front.jpg 1markka1994back.jpg
1 Markka coin 1994
400px

See also

External links

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Pre-euro and other EU currencies

Eurozone

Austrian schilling > Belgian franc | Dutch gulden | Finnish mark | French franc | German mark | Greek drachma | Irish pound | Italian lira | Luxembourgish franc | Monegasque franc | Portuguese escudo | San Marinese lira | Spanish peseta | Vatican lira
ERM II

Cypriot pound > Danish krone | Estonian kroon | Latvian lats | Lithuanian litas | Maltese lira | Slovak koruna | Slovenian tolar
Other EU

British pound | Czech koruna | Gibraltar pound | Hungarian forint | Polish złoty | Swedish krona
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