Austria, First Republic: Coins Issued and Used

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Austria, First Republic (1919 - 1938)
Information about what currencies were issued by Austria, First Republic, with lists of coinage, as well as periods when foreign-issued currencies were used.
Currency: Austrian Schilling, First Republic. Used in Austria, First Republic: (1924 - 1938)
CurrencyAustrian Schilling, First Republic
PeriodAustrian Schilling
Used1924 - 1938
Description

The Schilling was established by the Schilling Act (Schillingrechnungsgesetz) of December 20, 1924 at a rate of 1 Schilling to 10,000 Austro-Hungarian Kronen and issued on March 1, 1925. The Schilling was abolished in the wake of the Anschluss (1938), when it was exchanged at a rate of 2 German Reichsmark to 3 Schilling.

The Schilling was divided into 100 Groschen.

Unsorted
1 product (1925)
Product NameMintage
Half Schilling 1925 unknown
Currency: Austrian Krone. Used in Austria, First Republic: (1919 - 1925)
CurrencyAustrian Krone
PeriodAustrian Krone
Used1919 - 1925
Description

The Krone (pl. Kronen) was the currency of Austria (then called Deutschösterreich) and Liechtenstein after the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1919) until the introduction of the Schilling (1925) and the Franken, respectively.

Coins included 20 and 100 Krone gold coins minted with the same standard as their Austro-Hungarian Krone counterparts.

To ease the introduction of the new currency, 100, 200 and 1000 Krone coins were minted right before 1925 with the same parameters as the equivalent Groschen coins (1, 2 and 10 Groschen) that replaced them.

According to the provisions of the Treaty of St. Germain the newly created Republic of Austria had to overstamp the old paper money of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire still circulating in its territory, then had to replace the overstamped banknotes with new ones, and finally had to introduce an entirely new currency.

To fulfil the first step, circulating banknotes were overstamped with the inscription DEUTSCHÖSTERREICH, and new banknotes were also issued with this feature. Later, still under the name Oesterreichisch-ungarische Bank, banknotes were printed using the German-language clichés on both sides - and still bearing the DEUTSCHÖSTERREICH inscription. From 1920 on a new stamp appeared on banknotes: "Ausgegeben nach dem 4. Oktober 1920".

In 1922 a new series of Krone banknotes was introduced with a completely new design to fulfil the second step. The series contained 1 Krone, 2, 10, 20, 100, 1000, 5000, 50 000, 100 000 and 500 000 Kronen, later 10 000 Kronen (1 000 000 Kronen was planned but not issued).

In 1925, as the third step, the new Schilling banknotes were emitted.

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