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The second Estonian kroon currency was introduced in 1992, after Estonia gained independence from the USSR. The kroon was subdivided into 100 cents (senti; singular sent). The one kroon coin was a popular circulating denomination; there was also a banknote with the same value, but the banknote was only issued in 1992 and was rarely used, as opposed to the coin. These first 1 kroon coins (issued in 1992, 1993 and 1995) were made of copper-nickel (75% copper, 25% nickel); however, due to their similarity to the German one mark, this type was discontinued and they were demonetised on 1 June 1998. Later 1 kroon coins were made of "Nordic gold". | ||||
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Coin Name | Reverse | Obverse | Details |
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One Kroon 1992 (mint sets only) | ![]() |
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Material: CuproNickel Mint: Juveel Mintage: 20,000 |
One Kroon 1993 | ![]() |
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Material: CuproNickel Mint: Juveel Mintage: 10,260,000 |
One Kroon 1995 | ![]() |
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Material: CuproNickel Mint: Juveel Mintage: 19,920,000 |
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The Definitive Guide to Australian Silver Coins |
Country | Estonia |
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Currency | Kroon (Second Kroon, 1992 - 2011) |
Sub-type of | One Kroon |
From | 1992 |
To | 1995 |
Face Value | 1 (x Kroon) |
Current | No (demonetised 1998) |
Material | CuproNickel |
Designer | Ants Raud, Arseni Mölder |
Technology | Milled (machine-made) |
Shape | Round |
Orientation | Medal Alignment (Axis 0) |
Size | 23.3500 mm |
Thickness | 1.7000 mm |
Mass | 5.4400 g |