Anahuaca peso: Difference between revisions
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| frequently_used_banknotes = $20, $50, $100, $200, $300, $400, $500, $1,000 | | frequently_used_banknotes = $20, $50, $100, $200, $300, $400, $500, $1,000 | ||
| rarely_used_banknotes = $10, $2,000 | | rarely_used_banknotes = $10, $2,000 | ||
| issuing_authority = Bank of | | issuing_authority = Bank of Anáhuac | ||
| issuing_authority_website = {{URL|www.bancional.org.ah}} | | issuing_authority_website = {{URL|www.bancional.org.ah}} | ||
| printer = Bank of Anáhuac | | printer = Bank of Anáhuac | ||
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=== ''Nuevo Peso'' === | === ''Nuevo Peso'' === | ||
Throught most of the 20th century, the | Throught most of the 20th century, the Anahuense peso remained one of the more stable currencies in Olivacia, since the economy did not experience periods of hyperinflation common to other countries in the region. However, as a result of the aftermath of its own [[Gran Rugidoense Civil War|civil war]], Anáhuac defaulted on its external debt in 1976, and as a result the country suffered a severe case of {{wp|Capital flight|capital flight}}, followed by several years of inflation and devaluation. The ACU leapt from 12.50 to 19.40 pesos in 1976, and again from 23 to 150 pesos in 1981, stabilizing only in the mid 1980s at above 3,000 GRP/ACU when a government economic strategy called the "Stability and Economic Growth Pact" (''Pacto de estabilidad y crecimiento económico, PECE'') was adopted under President Sergio Kurosawa. | ||
Around this time, the | Around this time, the Anahuense peso was unofficially adopted by the island nation of [[Freice]]<ref name="The Sekapa Diary. (1986)."> The Sekapa Diary (2007). ''Anahuense peso accepted as currency on the ports of Sekapa''.</ref>, due to the geographical proximity and emerging trade relationships between said countries. | ||
On January 1, 1993, the Bank of | On January 1, 1993, the Bank of Anáhuac introduced a new currency, the ''nuevo peso'' ("new peso", or GRN), written "N$" followed by the numerical amount. One new peso, or N$1.00, was equal to 1,000 of the obsolete GRP pesos. The transition was done with minimal confusion by issuing the Series B "''nuevo peso''" banknotes in N$10, $20, $50, and $100 denominations with designs nearly identical to the corresponding banknote in the preceding Series A, which were labelled in old pesos. | ||
The new | The new Anahuense peso, however, has continued to depreciate versus other currencies, especially after the Anahuense peso crisis of January 1995. Rates between the peso and the hull were usually far more unstable compared to the usual leaps of the peso and the gen. Notwithstanding these various difficulties the Rugidoense currency has experienced much less cumulative inflation when compared to several other currencies in Olivacia, and the Anahuense peso is now among the 15 most traded currency units. | ||
== Coins == | == Coins == | ||
{|class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%;" | {|class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%;" | ||
|+ Coins of | |+ Coins of Anáhuac (as of 2022) | ||
|- | |- | ||
! rowspan="2" | Value | ! rowspan="2" | Value | ||
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| rowspan="2" | [[Stainless steel]] | | rowspan="2" | [[Stainless steel]] | ||
| rowspan="2" | Plain | | rowspan="2" | Plain | ||
| rowspan="2" | State title, Coat of Arms of | | rowspan="2" | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Stylized image of the solar rays of the “Ring of the Quincunxes of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | | Stylized image of the solar rays of the “Ring of the Quincunxes of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | ||
| 1996 | | 1996 | ||
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| Aluminium bronze<br />92% copper<br />6% aluminium<br />2% nickel | | Aluminium bronze<br />92% copper<br />6% aluminium<br />2% nickel | ||
| Plain | | Plain | ||
| State title, State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Stylized image of the “Thirteenth Acatl Day of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | | Stylized image of the “Thirteenth Acatl Day of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | ||
| 1996 | | 1996 | ||
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| Aluminium bronze<br />92% copper<br />6% aluminium<br />2% nickel | | Aluminium bronze<br />92% copper<br />6% aluminium<br />2% nickel | ||
| Plain | | Plain | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Stylized image of the “Ring of Acceptance of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | | Stylized image of the “Ring of Acceptance of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | ||
| 1996 | | 1996 | ||
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| rowspan="3" | '''Ring:''' Stainless steel (as 10¢)<br />'''Center:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) | | rowspan="3" | '''Ring:''' Stainless steel (as 10¢)<br />'''Center:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) | ||
| rowspan="3" | Plain | | rowspan="3" | Plain | ||
| rowspan="3" | State title, Coat of Arms of | | rowspan="3" | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Stylized image of the “Ring of Splendor of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | | Stylized image of the “Ring of Splendor of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}}.” | ||
| {{Coin-silver-color}} rowspan="3" | 1996 | | {{Coin-silver-color}} rowspan="3" | 1996 | ||
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| '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | | '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | ||
| Reeded edge | | Reeded edge | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Circle of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}} representing {{wp|Tonatiuh|Cuauhtlehuanitl}} with the fire mask. | | Circle of the {{wp|Aztec sun stone|Sun Stone}} representing {{wp|Tonatiuh|Cuauhtlehuanitl}} with the fire mask. | ||
| {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 1997 | | {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 1997 | ||
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| '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | | '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | ||
| Reeded edge | | Reeded edge | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Ahuitzotl II. | | Ahuitzotl II. | ||
| {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2005 | | {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2005 | ||
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| '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | | '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | ||
| Reeded edge | | Reeded edge | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense_War_of_Independence (1808 - 1811)|Mohamed Navarro]] | | [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense_War_of_Independence (1808 - 1811)|Mohamed Navarro]] | ||
| {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2010 | | {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2010 | ||
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| '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | | '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | ||
| Reeded edge | | Reeded edge | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Value, {{wp|Lockheed F-104 Starfighter|F-04 Starfire}} of the Rebellion. | | Value, {{wp|Lockheed F-104 Starfighter|F-04 Starfire}} of the Rebellion. | ||
| {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2005 | | {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2005 | ||
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| '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | | '''Ring:''' Aluminium bronze (as 50¢)<br />'''Center:'''<br />65% copper<br />25% zinc<br />10% nickel. | ||
| Reeded edge | | Reeded edge | ||
| State title, Coat of Arms of | | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | ||
| Xiuhtecuhtli Year 2000, Xaliecan "New Fire" ceremony | | Xiuhtecuhtli Year 2000, Xaliecan "New Fire" ceremony | ||
| {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2000 | | {{Coin-yellow-color}} | 2000 | ||
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{{Clear}} | {{Clear}} | ||
{|class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%" | {|class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%" | ||
|+ | |+ Anahuense banknotes (as of 2022) | ||
|- | |- | ||
!colspan="2"| Image !!rowspan="2"| Value !!rowspan="2"| Dimensions (millimeters)!!rowspan="2"| Main Color !!colspan="2"| Description !!colspan="3"| Date of | !colspan="2"| Image !!rowspan="2"| Value !!rowspan="2"| Dimensions (millimeters)!!rowspan="2"| Main Color !!colspan="2"| Description !!colspan="3"| Date of | ||
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| 125 × 65 mm | | 125 × 65 mm | ||
| Yellow | | Yellow | ||
| Pre-Canterian | | Pre-Canterian Anáhuac: {{wp|Olmec colossal heads|Dizhan head}}. | ||
| Archeological site of Los Carrizales. | | Archeological site of Los Carrizales. | ||
| 31 December 2020 | | 31 December 2020 | ||
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| 120 × 65 mm | | 120 × 65 mm | ||
| Red and Green | | Red and Green | ||
| Bicentennial of | | Bicentennial of Anahuense independence | ||
| Mangrove ecosystem: Crocodile, red mangrove, and Chan Santa Cruz Biosphere Reserve. | | Mangrove ecosystem: Crocodile, red mangrove, and Chan Santa Cruz Biosphere Reserve. | ||
| 6 January 2021 | | 6 January 2021 | ||
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| 125 × 65 mm | | 125 × 65 mm | ||
| Magenta | | Magenta | ||
| Pre-Canterian | | Pre-Canterian Anáhuac; Moctezuma III | ||
| Riparian and lake ecosystems represented by the {{wp|Axolotl|axolotl}} and the Río Xocoyotzin. | | Riparian and lake ecosystems represented by the {{wp|Axolotl|axolotl}} and the Río Xocoyotzin. | ||
| 31 March 2021 | | 31 March 2021 | ||
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| 139 × 65 mm | | 139 × 65 mm | ||
| Green | | Green | ||
| | | Anahuense War of Independence; [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense|Aramberri Lavín]] | ||
| Desert and matorral ecosystems represented by the golden eagle and the Desierto de Jilachi y Planta Álcamar reserve. | | Desert and matorral ecosystems represented by the golden eagle and the Desierto de Jilachi y Planta Álcamar reserve. | ||
| 28 November 2018 | | 28 November 2018 | ||
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| Gray | | Gray | ||
| Rugidoense Revolution; [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Germán Castillejos]], [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Francisco Venegas]] & [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Martín Falcón]] | | Rugidoense Revolution; [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Germán Castillejos]], [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Francisco Venegas]] & [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Rugidoense Revolution (1910 - 1917)|Martín Falcón]] | ||
| Desert ecosystems represented by a scorpion and [[Ferrocarriles Nacionales de | | Desert ecosystems represented by a scorpion and [[Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Anáhuac|N.de.R. 2143]]. | ||
| 10 June 2019 | | 10 June 2019 | ||
| 19 November 2020 | | 19 November 2020 | ||
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| 159 × 65 mm | | 159 × 65 mm | ||
| Brown | | Brown | ||
| | | Anahuense Civil War; [[Susete Hernández Niño]] and {{wp|Lockheed F-104 Starfighter|F-04 Starfires}} | ||
| Urban landscape represented by the ruins of San Jorge Xayacatlán with citizens helping cleanse the debris. | | Urban landscape represented by the ruins of San Jorge Xayacatlán with citizens helping cleanse the debris. | ||
| 19 September 2020 | | 19 September 2020 | ||
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| 159 × 65 mm | | 159 × 65 mm | ||
| Orange | | Orange | ||
| Contemporary | | Contemporary Anáhuac; [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Contemporary Anáhuac (1971 - present)|Tomás Treviño]]. | ||
| Urban landscape represented by general overview of San Jorge Xayacatlán. | | Urban landscape represented by general overview of San Jorge Xayacatlán. | ||
| 3 July 2018 | | 3 July 2018 | ||
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| 159 × 65 mm | | 159 × 65 mm | ||
| Purple | | Purple | ||
| | | Anahuense Political Crisis; [[Directorio Nacional de Figuras de la Historia Gran Rugidoense#Political Crisis in Anáhuac (1918 - 1968)|Videl de la García]]. | ||
| Industrial landscape represented by the refinery of Santa Lucía. | | Industrial landscape represented by the refinery of Santa Lucía. | ||
| 16 October 2021 | | 16 October 2021 | ||
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|} | |} | ||
== Usage outside | == Usage outside Anáhuac == | ||
Some establishments in border areas of [[Zhiguryia]] and accept | Some establishments in border areas of [[Zhiguryia]] and accept Anahuense pesos as currency, such as certain border stores, restuarants and gasoline stations. Given it close distance compared to [[Riamo]], [[Freice]] began utilizing the Anahuense peso as a secondary currency in the 1980s, provoking an initial controversy before it was accepted. On July 2022, the Anahuense peso was accepted as a viable currency, alongside the Hoterallian gen. After the [[2023 Freician constitutional referendums]], the use of pesos in Freice was discontinued after the island voted for the [[Hoterallian gen]] as the sole valid currency.<ref name=": Land_Areas3">[https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ "Constitutional Referendum 2022"]. ''Government of Freice''. 31 October 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.</ref> | ||
Other than the aformentioned circumstances and events, | Other than the aformentioned circumstances and events, Anahuense pesos are generally not accepted as currency outside of Anáhuac. | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == |
Latest revision as of 05:50, 17 July 2023
Peso Anahuaca (Spanish) | |
---|---|
ISO 4217 | |
Unit | |
Symbol | $ or GR$ |
Denominations | |
Symbol | |
centavo | ¢ |
Banknotes | |
Freq. used | $20, $50, $100, $200, $300, $400, $500, $1,000 |
Rarely used | $10, $2,000 |
Coins | |
Freq. used | $1, $2, $5, $10 |
Rarely used | 50¢, $20, $50, $100 |
Demographics | |
User(s) | Anáhuac |
Issuance | |
Central bank | Bank of Anáhuac |
Website | www |
Printer | Bank of Anáhuac |
Website | www |
Mint | Fábrica Nacional de Moneda Nacional |
Website | www |
Valuation | |
Inflation | 7.65% |
The Anahuaca peso (symbol: $; code: AHP) is the currency of Anáhuac. The peso shares the common origin of the Canterian real, continuing to use its sign, "$".
The current ISO 4217 code for the peso is AHP. The peso is subdivided into 100 centavos, represented by "¢". The Anahuaca peso is the 16th most traded currency in the world, the third most traded currency from Olivacia (after the Riamese hull and Hoterallian gen). As of June 1, 2023, the exchange rate of the peso compared to other currencies in Olivacia are as follows: 1 ANP is equal to $6.20 gens and 1 ANP is equal to $0.046 hulls.[1]
History
Etymology
The name was first used in reference to pesos oro ('gold weights') or pesos plata ('silver weights'). The Canterian word peso means weight, which was also used to differenciate itself from the Imperial Riamese pound hull.
First peso
Officially, the first iteration of the Anahuaca peso was adopted on August 1, 1839. However, early attempts to replace the reales dated as back as the Independnece War, where one of the main purposes of the Separatist Army was to replace a "worthless coin". In 1842, the Centralist Republic began the minting of pesos divided into 100 centavos. The restored republic under Raymundo Vigil and Ángel Lenoci continued the minting of centavo coins in base metal or silver, as well as gold coins in pesos.
From 1918 onward the weight and fineness of all the silver coins declined, until 1977, when the last silver 100-peso coins were minted. When the Anterian Common Unit (ACU) was established, the currency worth 2.00 silver pesos, rising afterwards until it stabilized at 12.50 pesos.
Nuevo Peso
Throught most of the 20th century, the Anahuense peso remained one of the more stable currencies in Olivacia, since the economy did not experience periods of hyperinflation common to other countries in the region. However, as a result of the aftermath of its own civil war, Anáhuac defaulted on its external debt in 1976, and as a result the country suffered a severe case of capital flight, followed by several years of inflation and devaluation. The ACU leapt from 12.50 to 19.40 pesos in 1976, and again from 23 to 150 pesos in 1981, stabilizing only in the mid 1980s at above 3,000 GRP/ACU when a government economic strategy called the "Stability and Economic Growth Pact" (Pacto de estabilidad y crecimiento económico, PECE) was adopted under President Sergio Kurosawa.
Around this time, the Anahuense peso was unofficially adopted by the island nation of Freice[2], due to the geographical proximity and emerging trade relationships between said countries.
On January 1, 1993, the Bank of Anáhuac introduced a new currency, the nuevo peso ("new peso", or GRN), written "N$" followed by the numerical amount. One new peso, or N$1.00, was equal to 1,000 of the obsolete GRP pesos. The transition was done with minimal confusion by issuing the Series B "nuevo peso" banknotes in N$10, $20, $50, and $100 denominations with designs nearly identical to the corresponding banknote in the preceding Series A, which were labelled in old pesos.
The new Anahuense peso, however, has continued to depreciate versus other currencies, especially after the Anahuense peso crisis of January 1995. Rates between the peso and the hull were usually far more unstable compared to the usual leaps of the peso and the gen. Notwithstanding these various difficulties the Rugidoense currency has experienced much less cumulative inflation when compared to several other currencies in Olivacia, and the Anahuense peso is now among the 15 most traded currency units.
Coins
Value | Images | Technical parameters | Description | Minting history | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Obverse | Reverse | Diameter | Weight | Composition | Edge | Obverse | Reverse | Year | |||
5¢ | [1] | [2] | 15.5 mm | 1.58 g | Stainless steel | Plain | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Stylized image of the solar rays of the “Ring of the Quincunxes of the Sun Stone.” | 1996 | ||
10¢ | [3] | [4] | 17 mm | 2.08 g | Stylized image of the “Ring of the Sacrifice of the Sun Stone.” | 1996 | |||||
20¢ | [5] | [6] | 19.5 mm (shortest) Dodecagon |
3.04 g | Aluminium bronze 92% copper 6% aluminium 2% nickel |
Plain | State title, State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Stylized image of the “Thirteenth Acatl Day of the Sun Stone.” | 1996 | ||
50¢ | [7] | [8] | 22 mm Dodecagon, notched |
4.39 g | Aluminium bronze 92% copper 6% aluminium 2% nickel |
Plain | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Stylized image of the “Ring of Acceptance of the Sun Stone.” | 1996 | ||
$1 | [9] | [10] | 21 mm | 3.95 g R: 2.14 g C: 1.81 g |
Ring: Stainless steel (as 10¢) Center: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) |
Plain | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Stylized image of the “Ring of Splendor of the Sun Stone.” | 1996 | ||
$2 | [11] | [12] | 23 mm | 5.19 g R: 2.81 g C: 2.38 g |
Stylized image of the “Ring of the Days of the Sun Stone.” | ||||||
$5 | [13] | [14] | 25.5 mm | 7.07 g R: 3.82 g C: 3.25 g |
Stylized image of the “Ring of the Serpents of the Sun Stone.” | ||||||
$10 | [15] | [16] | 28 mm | 10.329 g R: 5.579 g C: 4.75 g |
Ring: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) Center: 65% copper 25% zinc 10% nickel. |
Reeded edge | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Circle of the Sun Stone representing Cuauhtlehuanitl with the fire mask. | 1997 | ||
$20 | [17] | [18] | 32 mm | 15.945 g R: 8.59 g C: 7.355 g |
Ring: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) Center: 65% copper 25% zinc 10% nickel. |
Reeded edge | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Ahuitzotl II. | 2005 | ||
$20 (C1) | [19] | [20] | 30 mm | 12.67 g R: 7.16 g C: 5.51 g |
Ring: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) Center: 65% copper 25% zinc 10% nickel. |
Reeded edge | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Mohamed Navarro | 2010 | ||
$50 | [21] | [22] | 28 mm | 10.329 g R: 5.579 g C: 4.75 g |
Ring: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) Center: 65% copper 25% zinc 10% nickel. |
Reeded edge | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Value, F-04 Starfire of the Rebellion. | 2005 | ||
$100 | [23] | [24] | 28 mm | 10.329 g R: 5.579 g C: 4.75 g |
Ring: Aluminium bronze (as 50¢) Center: 65% copper 25% zinc 10% nickel. |
Reeded edge | State title, Coat of Arms of Anáhuac | Xiuhtecuhtli Year 2000, Xaliecan "New Fire" ceremony | 2000 |
Banknotes
Image | Value | Dimensions (millimeters) | Main Color | Description | Date of | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Obverse | Reverse | Obverse | Reverse | printing | issue | withdrawal | |||
[25] | [26] | $10 | 125 × 65 mm | Yellow | Pre-Canterian Anáhuac: Dizhan head. | Archeological site of Los Carrizales. | 31 December 2020 | 28 October 2021 | |
[27] | [28] | $20 | 120 × 65 mm | Red and Green | Bicentennial of Anahuense independence | Mangrove ecosystem: Crocodile, red mangrove, and Chan Santa Cruz Biosphere Reserve. | 6 January 2021 | 24 September 2021 | |
[29] | [30] | $50 | 125 × 65 mm | Magenta | Pre-Canterian Anáhuac; Moctezuma III | Riparian and lake ecosystems represented by the axolotl and the Río Xocoyotzin. | 31 March 2021 | 28 October 2021 | |
[31] | [32] | $100 | 132 × 65 mm | Red | New Canteria; Virrey Juan Carlos de Gavrilia | Temperate forest ecosystems represented by the monarch butterfly and the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve | 8 May 2020 | 12 November 2020 | |
[33] | [34] | $200 | 139 × 65 mm | Green | Anahuense War of Independence; Aramberri Lavín | Desert and matorral ecosystems represented by the golden eagle and the Desierto de Jilachi y Planta Álcamar reserve. | 28 November 2018 | 2 September 2019 | |
[35] | $300 | 146 × 65 mm | Blue | La Reforma and Restoration of the Republic; Raymundo Vigil | Coastal, marine and insular ecosystems represented by the gray whale and Isla Roca Roja biosphere. | 19 May 2017 | 27 August 2018 | ||
[36] | [37] | $400 | 153 × 65 mm | Gray | Rugidoense Revolution; Germán Castillejos, Francisco Venegas & Martín Falcón | Desert ecosystems represented by a scorpion and N.de.R. 2143. | 10 June 2019 | 19 November 2020 | |
[38] | [39] | $500 | 159 × 65 mm | Brown | Anahuense Civil War; Susete Hernández Niño and F-04 Starfires | Urban landscape represented by the ruins of San Jorge Xayacatlán with citizens helping cleanse the debris. | 19 September 2020 | 24 September 2021 | |
[40] | [41] | $1,000 | 159 × 65 mm | Orange | Contemporary Anáhuac; Tomás Treviño. | Urban landscape represented by general overview of San Jorge Xayacatlán. | 3 July 2018 | 5 December 2020 | |
[42] | [43] | $2,000 | 159 × 65 mm | Purple | Anahuense Political Crisis; Videl de la García. | Industrial landscape represented by the refinery of Santa Lucía. | 16 October 2021 | 21 August 2022 |
Usage outside Anáhuac
Some establishments in border areas of Zhiguryia and accept Anahuense pesos as currency, such as certain border stores, restuarants and gasoline stations. Given it close distance compared to Riamo, Freice began utilizing the Anahuense peso as a secondary currency in the 1980s, provoking an initial controversy before it was accepted. On July 2022, the Anahuense peso was accepted as a viable currency, alongside the Hoterallian gen. After the 2023 Freician constitutional referendums, the use of pesos in Freice was discontinued after the island voted for the Hoterallian gen as the sole valid currency.[3]
Other than the aformentioned circumstances and events, Anahuense pesos are generally not accepted as currency outside of Anáhuac.
Notes
- ↑ Adopted the 1980s, recognised as an official currency in July 2022 and use discontinued in April 2023.
- ↑ Periodico El Trueque. (2023). El peso gana ligero terreno contra el gen y el hull.
- ↑ The Sekapa Diary (2007). Anahuense peso accepted as currency on the ports of Sekapa.
- ↑ "Constitutional Referendum 2022". Government of Freice. 31 October 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.