Kreuzer

The Kreuzer (German: [ˈkʁɔʏtsɐ] ), in English also spelled kreutzer[1] (/ˈkrɔɪtsər/ KROYT-sər), was a coin and unit of currency in the southern German states prior to the introduction of the German gold mark in 1871–1873, and in Austria and Switzerland. After 1760 it was made of copper.[2] In south Germany the kreuzer was typically worth 4 pfennigs and there were 60 kreuzers to a gulden. Kreuzer was abbreviated as Kr, kr, K or Xr.

1690 Kreuzer of Friedrich Karl, administrator
1776 Kreuzer of Bern

Early history

The kreuzer goes back to a groschen coin minted in Merano in South Tyrol in 1271 (the so-called etscher Kreuzer[3]). Because of the double cross (German: Kreuz) on the face of the coin, it was soon given the name Kreuzer. It spread in the 15th and 16th centuries throughout the south of the German-speaking area. The Imperial Coinage Act of 1551 made them the unit for small silver coins.

In 1559 a value of 60 kreuzers to 1 gulden had been adopted throughout the southern states of the Holy Roman Empire, but the northern German states declined to join, and used the groschen instead of the kreuzer. The kreuzer in turn was worth about 4.2 pfennigs (pennies). Thus one (golden) gulden was worth 60 kreuzers or 252 pfennigs. Later currencies adopted a standard relationship of 240 pfennigs = 60 kreuzers = 1 gulden.

Conventionsmünze

30 kreutzers of Austria, Franz II, 1807. Copper, weight 18.13 g.

Following the adoption of the Conventionsthaler in 1754, two distinct kreuzers came into being. The first, sometimes referred to as the Conventionskreuzer, was worth 1120 of a Conventionsthaler, valuing the gulden at half a Conventionsthaler. This was used in Austria-Hungary. However, the states of southern Germany adopted a smaller kreuzer Landmünze worth 1144 of a Conventionsthaler, thus valuing the gulden at 512 of a Conventionsthaler. In fact, the southern German states issued coins denominated in kreuzer Landmünze up to 6 kreuzer Landmünze (equal to 5 Conventionskreuzer), but in Conventionskreuzer for higher denominations.

South Germany 1837–1873

The South German Currency Union of 1837 used a system of 60 kreuzers = 1 gulden and 1+34 gulden = 1 thaler, with the kreuzer equal to the old Kreuzer Landmünze. These kreuzers continued in circulation until decimalization following the unification of Germany in 1871.

Austria-Hungary 1857–1892

Austria-Hungary decimalized in 1857, adopting a system of 100 kreuzers = 1 Austro-Hungarian florin. 1+12 florins = 1 Vereinsthaler. The kreuzer was known as krajczár in Hungarian (krajcár in modern orthography), krejcar in Czech, grajciar in Slovak, krajcar in Slovene and Serbocroatian, creițar or crăițar in Romanian, grajcar in Polish.

See also

References

  1. New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 1997
  2. "Coin Denominations". www.austriancoins.com. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  3. D. Johann Georg Krünitz (1780), Oekononomisch-technologische Encyklopädie oder allgemeines System der Stats- Stadt- Haus- und Landwirtschaft und der Kunstgeschichte in alphabetischer Ordnung (in German), Berlin: Joachim Pauli, pp. 374–378
  • The dictionary definition of Kreuzer at Wiktionary
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.