Neuchâtel gulden
The gulden a currency denomination of Neuchâtel equal to 21 batz until 1850. Neuchâtel's basic currency unit was the livre (later franc), divided into 10 batz or 40 kreuzer. The French silver écu was worth 42 batz or 2 gulden. It was replaced by the Swiss franc.
Coins
In the late 18th century, billon 1⁄2 and 1 creuzer and 1⁄2 and 1 batz were issued, together with silver 1⁄3, 1⁄2, 2⁄3 and 1 gulden. The 1⁄3 and 2⁄3 gulden were denominated as 28 and 56 creuzer, whilst the 1⁄2 and 1 gulden were denominated as 10+1⁄2 and 21 batz. After 1799, only the billon coins were issued, with the last coins struck in 1818.
References
- Krause, Chester L.; Clifford Mishler (1991). Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1801–1991 (18th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873411501.
External links
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Currencies named florin or similar
- Aruban florin
- Hungarian forint
- Netherlands Antillean guilder
- Polish zloty
- Austro-Hungarian florin (Gulden, forint, zlatý)
- Baden gulden
- Bavarian gulden
- British Guianan guilder
- Conventionsgulden
- Danzig gulden
- Dutch guilder
- East African florin
- Fribourg gulden
- Guldengroschen
- Lombardo-Venetian florin
- Luzern Gulden
- Netherlands Indies gulden
- Dutch New Guinean gulden
- Neuchâtel gulden
- Rhenish gulden
- Schwyz Gulden
- South German Gulden
- Surinamese guilder
- Tuscan florin
- Württemberg Gulden
- Florin (British coin)
- Florin (English coin)
- Florin (Irish coin)
- Florin (Italian coin)
- Caribbean guilder
- Florin sign (ƒ)
- {{Groschen}}
- {{Pfennig}}
- {{Thaler}}
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