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Bosnie Herzégovine

Bosnia herzegovina

Le mark convertible est la monnaie actuelle de la Bosnie-Herzégovine. Il a succédé au dinar yougoslave, peu avant la guerre de 1992. À ses débuts, c'était simplement le Deutsche Mark utilisé localement comme monnaie de facto, puisqu'il s'agissait en fait de la monnaie allemande, mais les autorités des Nations unies qui administraient la Bosnie-Herzégovine, avant que l'Allemagne ne passe à l'euro, ont fait changer son nom et ses billets qui sont devenus Konvertibilna marka (KM) ou mark convertible en français. La valeur du mark convertible est exactement celle du Deutsche Mark par rapport à l'euro.
Les billets de banque, à l'exception du 
 200 Mark, sont imprimés par la société française Oberthur

The convertible mark is the current currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He succeeded the Yugoslav dinar shortly before the 1992 war. At the beginning, it was simply the Deutsche Mark used locally as a de facto currency, since it was actually German currency, but the United Nations authorities united states that administered Bosnia and Herzegovina, before Germany switched to the euro, changed its name and notes to Konvertibilna marka (KM) or mark convertible into French. The value of the convertible mark is exactly that of the Deutsche Mark against the euro.

Banknotes, with the exception of the 200 Mark, are printed by the French company Oberthur

Monnaie:   Mark convertible (MK-marka.) BAM

2 billets
Emisson 1992

Banque nationale de Bosnie Herzégovine

National Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Emission 1992

dinar yougoslave

Banknote Bosnie
P14a
P15a
Banknote Bosnie

Mostar's old bridge had been built
  in 1566 by Mimar Hajrudin. The bridge was an arch
donkey that had an opening of 27 meters,
4 meters wide and 30 meters long. The height of the bridge was 20 meters, compared to the level of the river in summer. The bridge was flanked by two fortified towers, the Halebija Tower (right bank) and the Tara Tower (left bank), both dating - in their pre-armed conflict state - from the 17th century.

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