Aureuso (Pacifica): Difference between revisions

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>Anserisa
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<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_001.png|1 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_001.png|1 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_001.png|1 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_001.png|1 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_002.png|2 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_002.png|2 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_002.png|2 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_002.png|2 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_005.png|5 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_005.png|5 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_005.png|5 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_005.png|5 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_010.png|10 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_010.png|10 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_010.png|10 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_010.png|10 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_020.png|20 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_020.png|20 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_020.png|20 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_020.png|20 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_050.png|50 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_050.png|50 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_050.png|50 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_050.png|50 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_100.png|100 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_100.png|100 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_100.png|100 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_100.png|100 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_500.png|500 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_500.png|500 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_500.png|500 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_500.png|500 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_1000.png|1000 Aureuso Obverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_1000.png|1000 Aureuso Obverse
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_1000.png|1000 Aureuso Reverse
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_1000.png|1000 Aureuso Reverse
</gallery>
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_025.png|25 Aureuso Obverse (1865 special edition)
Anserisan Banknote 1817 01_025.png|25 Aureuso Obverse (1865 special edition)
</gallery>
<gallery mode=nolines>
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_025.png|25 Aureuso Reverse (1865 special edition)
Anserisan Banknote 1817 02_025.png|25 Aureuso Reverse (1865 special edition)
</gallery>
</gallery>

Revision as of 17:55, 26 April 2020

Aureuso
Aureuso
File:Anserisan Banknotes Obverse.png
2012 Flag Series
Currency Code
CodeAUR
Denominations
Subunit
1/100cento
PluralAureusem
centocentem
Symbolɑ
centoç
NicknameAurumo (old name)
Banknotes
Frequently used5ɑ, 10ɑ, 20ɑ, 50ɑ, 100ɑ
Rarely used1ɑ, 2ɑ, 25ɑ (commemorative only), 500ɑ, 1000ɑ
Coins
Frequently used10ç, 25ç, 1ɑ, 2ɑ
Rarely used1ç, 5ç, 50ç (commemorative only)
Demographics
Date of introduction1809
User(s) Anserisa
Issuance
Central bank|Anserisan Central Bank Administration

The Aureuso (symbol: ɑ; code: AUR) is the currency of Anserisa. It is abbreviated with its symbol ɑ or sometimes AUR. It is divided into 100 centem (ç).

Because the currency was formerly named Aurumo in the past, it is sometimes referred to that nickname, but it is somehow rare. During the Anserisan Empire, the currency was called Ouromo, the name of the currency in New Anserisan.

History

Coins

Coins are produced by the Anserisan Coinage and Printing Administration facility in Geneva on Branta Island. In denominations of 10ç, 25ç, 1ɑ and 2ɑ. The 50ç is produced sometimes as a commemorative coin, even though it as legal tender it is rarely seen circulating but has a high value for collectors. The AMIA used to produce coins in denominations of 1ç and 5ç, production stopped in 2012[1]. They continue to be legal tender, although they are only accepted as payment and not given back as change.

Banknotes

Same as the coins, the banknotes in Anserisa are issued by the Anserisan Coinage and Printing Administration. The first type of banknotes in Anserisa were receipts payable to the bearer of the document rather than the original depositor. The first modern banknotes in Anserisa appear during the Anserisan Empire and the creation by Emperor Hadriano of the Imperial Bank of Anserisa in 1809, the predecessor of the Anserisan Central Bank Administration. The banknotes issued by the Empire were legal tender until the first issue created by the new AMIA in 1817, during the period between the end of the Empire and the new Republic, banknotes from the Empire were still legal tender but most of them were defaced to remove the mentions of the Empire. The banknotes are issued in denominations of 5ɑ, 10ɑ, 20ɑ, 50ɑ and 100ɑ, previously banknotes in denominations of 1ɑ, 2ɑ, 500ɑ and 1000ɑ were issued but they are retired. The denomination of 25ɑ has always been used for commemorative editions and is rarely used today.

Legal tender

Gallery of Banknotes

The different issues of banknotes from the Imperial Bank of Anserisa and the Anserisan Central Bank Administration.

1809-1815

The Imperial Series is the only one featuring Emperor Hadriano, it was issued in 1809, with the creation of the Imperial Bank of Anserisa. It features a standardized series with the face of the Emperor on the obverse and the Coat of Arms of the Empire on the reverse.

1815-1817

The Defaced Series is an unofficial series for it was still legal tender to use the Imperial banknotes from 1815 until the creation of the Anserisan Central Bank Administration which created its first series in 1817 and it was common use to deface the imperial symbols on the banknotes, it became known as the defaced series.

1817-1915

The first series created by the Anserisan Central Bank Administration which featured the first President Calpurnio Fabricium. They are also the first banknotes to feature colours, although the values are not associated to same colours as the actual banknotes. It was also the first to feature a special banknote in 1865, for the fiftieth anniversary of the Republic.

See Also

  1. Anserisan Coinage Production Reform Act : ACR-2012-09 (2012). Office of the Legislative Documents, Brantavilla.