5 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 5 Croatian kuna has dimensions 122×61 mm and main colors are slate gray, timberwolf, pale silver and alice blue. Date of issue of 5 kuna banknote was 9 July 2001. | |
Obverse side of the 5 Croatian kuna is showing Croatian Duke Fran Krsto Frankopan and the Croatian Ban Petar Zrinski. They were Croatian aristocrats and leaders of the movement for emancipation from Vienna. They were both executed in 1671 after their revolt against Vienna failed. |
Reverse side of the 5 Croatian kuna is showing Keep and the ground plan of Varazdin Castle, 12th-16th century. |
10 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 10 Croatian kuna has dimensions 126×63 mm and main colors are taupe gray, gainsboro, platinum and pale silver. Date of issue of 10 kuna banknote was 18 June 2001. | |
Obverse side of the 10 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Juraj Dobrila, Bishop of Poreč and Trieste from the 19th century. He was the leader of the Croatian Revival Movement in the battle for Croatian rights in Istria. In one of his first demands to the Istrian Parliament in Poreč, he asked that the Croatian should become the official language along with the Italian language. |
Reverse side of the 10 Croatian kuna is showing Arena in Pula, Istria built in the 1st century is one of the six still preserved Roman amphitheatres. Below is a ground plan of the small city of Motovun in Istria. |
20 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 20 Croatian kuna has dimensions 130×65 mm and main colors are almond, magnolia, mountbatten pink and languid lavender. Date of issue of 20 kuna banknote was 16 August 2001. | |
Obverse side of the 20 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of the Croatian Ban and general Josip Jelacic from the 19th century. He abolished serfdom and defended Croatian autonomy. |
Reverse side of the 20 Croatian kuna is showing Motif of the castle of Count Eltz in Vukovar and the motif of the dove of Vucedol, an eneolithic ceramic cult vessel in the form of a bird, one of the most beautiful preserved pieces of Vucedol culture. |
50 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 50 Croatian kuna has dimensions 134×67 mm and main colors are cadet grey, manatee, pale silver and anti-flash white. Date of issue of 50 kuna banknote was 25 November 2002. | |
Obverse side of the 50 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Ivan Gundulic (1589-1638), the greatest poet of the Croatian Renaissance literature, author of the ode to independence of the Dubrovnik Republic "Oh, beautiful, oh dear, oh sweet freedom!" |
Reverse side of the 50 Croatian kuna is showing Motif of The City, the old center of the city of Dubrovnik, until 1808 the capital of the independent Republic, today on the UNESCO's World Heritage List. |
100 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 100 Croatian kuna has dimensions 138×69 mm and main colors are rosy brown, pale chestnut, timberwolf and khaki. Date of issue of 100 kuna banknote was 3 June 2002. | |
Obverse side of the 100 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Ivan Mazuranic late 19th century Croatian Ban and poet, who declared Croatian language official and imposed obligatory education. Furthermore, a fragment of the Baska Inscription from the Convent of St. Lucy in Baska on the island of Krk can be seen. |
Reverse side of the 100 Croatian kuna is showing Motif and a ground plan of the church of St. Vid in Rijeka, patron of the city. The church is specificl for its octagon ground plan (early 17th century) |
200 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 200 Croatian kuna has dimensions 142×71 mm and main colors are old mauve, cinereous, raspberry glace and misty rose. Date of issue of 200 kuna banknote was 12 August 2002. | |
Obverse side of the 200 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Stjepan Radic (1871-1928), a charismatic Croatian political leader between the two world wars, who was assassinated 1928 in the Yugoslav parliament for speaking his mind and acting against the injustice. |
Reverse side of the 200 Croatian kuna is showing Motif of the building of the general headquarters in Osijek, the command for borders of Vojna krajina, as well as the ground plan of the old fortress in Osijek |
500 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 500 Croatian kuna has dimensions 146×73 mm and main colors are beaver, grullo, ivory and timberwolf. Date of issue of 500 kuna banknote was 31 May 1994. | |
Obverse side of the 500 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Marko Marulic (1450-1524), writer and humanist, the father of Croatian literature. In 1501 he wrote the first Croatian epic "Judita". |
Reverse side of the 500 Croatian kuna is showing Diocletian's Palace, Split, a late Roman building from the 3rd century on the UNSECO's World Heritage List. The birthplace of Split, the great Dalmatian capital. Below is the figure of a Croatian ruler from the 11th century. |
1000 Croatian kuna | |
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Banknote of 1000 Croatian kuna has dimensions 150×75 mm and main colors are trolley grey, isabelline, pastel gray and snow. Date of issue of 1000 kuna banknote was 31 May 1994. | |
Obverse side of the 1000 Croatian kuna is showing Portrait of Ante Stracevic, 19th century politician and the foremost advocate of his time for the idea of the Croatian nation. |
Reverse side of the 1000 Croatian kuna is showing The bill shows the monument to the first Croatian king from 925 Tomislav, located on the Tomislav square and a motif of the front elevation of Zagreb's Neolithic's cathedral of St. Stephan. |