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Surinamese Currency

My Surinamese collection of notes.......

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The coast of Suriname was discovered in 1499 by Alonso de Ojeda and Amerigo Vespucci. Suriname, known as Dutch Guiana, was ceded to the Dutch by the Treaty of Breda in 1667 after the English transferred sovereignty to them in exchange for New Amsterdam (New York). It was under British rule from 1804 until November 20, 1815 when the Treaty of Paris reestablished Surinam as a Dutch colony. Dutch Guiana was temporarily united with the Netherlands Antilles as part of the Dutch West Indies from 1828 until 1848. Suriname was integrated into the Netherlands in 1948, gained home rule in 1950, and achieved independence on November 25, 1975.

Dutch and Spanish coins were used in Suriname in the 1600s and 1700s, but the shortage of coins led to sugar being declared legal tender in 1669. It was used as money into the eighteenth century. Coins were minted specifically for Dutch Guiana in 1679 and 1764, but Dutch, Spanish and other coins were the primary source of currency until World War II.

The Dutch Guilder (XNLG) was the unit of account in Dutch Guiana while it was a Dutch colony. The Dutch Guilder was divisible into 20 Stuyver or 240 Penning until 1804, and divisible into 100 cents when the Guilder was reintroduced in Dutch Guiana in 1815. The West-Indische Bank issued banknotes between 1829 and 1837, and Da Surinaamsche Bank issued banknotes between 1865 and 1957. The Surinam Government also issued small-denominaton banknotes.

Suriname remained part of the Dutch monetary system until May 10, 1940 when Dutch Guiana broke its link to the Dutch metropolitan unit after the Nazis occupied the Netherlands, and the Suriname Guilder (SRG) was linked to the United States Dollar. Coins were struck for Suriname in 1942, and coins were issued in the name of Suriname from 1962 on. The Centrale Bank van Suriname began issuing banknotes in 1963, and continued to issue them after Suriname gained its independence in 1975. In 2004, Suriname replaced the Guilder with the Suriname Dollar (SRD) at the rate of 1 Suriname Dollar equal to 1000 Suriname Guilder.

Here is a 5 Gulden note dated 1963. The note is blue on multicolored underprint. The obverse depicts a Surinamese woman holding a fruit basket, with an ornate design in the center. The reverse features the national Coat-of-Arms with the denomiation showing on either side. The watermark for this note is that of a Toucan's head.

  • Krause# Pick-P-120a or b

If anyone knows how to tell the differance between the large size serial (P-120b) and the small size serial (P-120a) for this note.. Please Contact me. Thank You.

5 Gulden 1963 obverse P-120a or b 5 Gulden 1963 reverse P-120a or b
Obverse Reverse

Here is a banknote worth 10 Gulden dated 1963. The note is orange on multicolored underprint. The obverse depicts a Surinamese woman holding a fruit basket, with an ornate design in the center. The reverse features the national Coat-of-Arms with the denomiation showing on either side. The watermark for this note is that of a Toucan's head.

  • Krause# Pick-P-121
10 Gulden 1963 obverse P-121 10 Gulden 1963 reverse P-121
Obverse Reverse

This is a 1985 dated 25 Gulden note. The note is green on multicolored underprint. The obverse features a stone relief of a woman dancing with soldiers beyond. The reverse depicts a local building with a falg perched on top. This note has a watermark of a Toucan's head.

  • Krause# Pick-P-127b
Suriname 25 Gulden 1985 obverse P-127b Suriname 25 Gulden 1985 reverse P-127b
Obverse Reverse

This is a 100 Gulden note dated 1985. The note is purple on multicolored underprint. The obverse shows an ornate design in the center, the denomination to the left, and a dancing woman among a group of soldiers to the right. The reverse shows a building in the Architectural style of the area. The watermark for this note is that of a Toucan's head.

  • Krause# Pick-P-128b
100 Gulden 1985 obverse P-128b 100 Gulden 1985 reverse P-128b
Obverse Reverse

Here is a 100 Gulden banknote dated 1986. The note is purple on multicolored underprint. The obverse features Cornelis Gerard Anton de Kom (a Surinamese resistance fighter and anti-colonialist author) to the left, a vingette similar to P-128b with a dancing woman among a group of soldiers of the militia to the right and a row of buildings showing the architectural style of Suriname along the bottom. The reverse shows a Toucan to the left and a group of Surinamese listening to a speaker to the right. The watermark for this note is that of a Toucan's head.

  • Krause# Pick-P-133a
100 Gulden 1986 obverse P-133a 100 Gulden 1986 reverse P-133a
Obverse Reverse

This is a 10 Gulden banknote dated 2000. The note is green, purple and brown on multicolored underprint. The obverse depicts the Black-throated Mango surounded by an ornate design and the national Coat-of-Arms. The reverse depicts the flower, the Scarlet Star, with a building in the background.

  • Krause# Pick-P-147
10 Gulden 2000 obverse P-147 10 Gulden 2000 reverse P-147
Obverse Reverse

Here is a 2000 dated 5 Gulden note. The note is blue on multicolored underprint. The obverse features a red-necked woodpecker to the left, and the national coar of arms on the right. The reverse depicts the flower Passiflora Quadrangularis with a building in the background.

  • Krause# Pick-P-146

Note donated by R.R.

5 Gulden 2000 obverse P-146 5 Gulden 2000 reverse P-146
Obverse Reverse

 

  • Krause# Pick-P-
   
Obverse Reverse


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