Finnish markka
Appearance
Finnish markka | |||
---|---|---|---|
Suomen markka (Finnish) finsk mark (Swedish) | |||
| |||
ISO 4217 Code | FIM | ||
User(s) | None, previously: Finland | ||
ERM | |||
Since | 14 October 1996 | ||
Fixed rate since | 31 December 1998 | ||
Replaced by €, non cash | 1 January 1999 | ||
Replaced by €, cash | 1 January 2002 | ||
€ = | 5.94573 mk | ||
Subunit | |||
1⁄100 | penni | ||
Symbol | mk | ||
penni | p | ||
Plural | markkaa (Finnish partitive sg.) mark (Swedish) | ||
penni | penniä (Finnish partitive sg.) penni (Swedish) | ||
Coins | |||
Freq. used | 10 p, 50 p, 1 mk, 5 mk, 10 mk | ||
Rarely used | 1 p (until 1979), 5 p and 20 p (until 1990) | ||
Banknotes | |||
Freq. used | 10 mk, 20 mk, 50 mk, 100 mk, 500 mk | ||
Rarely used | 1000 mk | ||
Central bank | Bank of Finland | ||
Website | www.bof.fi | ||
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete. |
The Finnish markka, also known as the Suomen markka, or simply markka, was the currency in Finland before Finland started to use Euro. Markka's abbreviation was mk and internationally FIM. There were 100 pennies, (penni, p), to each markka. There were also coupons.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Money of Finland.