Creeperian colón
Creeperian Colón | |
---|---|
Colón Creeperiano | |
ISO 4217 | |
Code | CLN |
Number | 1381 |
Exponent | 3 |
Denominations | |
Subunit | |
1⁄100 | Centavo |
Plural | Colóns or Colónes |
Centavo | Centavos |
Symbol | ₡ |
Centavo | ¢ |
Banknotes | |
Freq. used | ₡1, ₡5, ₡10, ₡20, ₡50, ₡100 |
Rarely used | ₡2, ₡200, ₡500, ₡1,000 |
Coins | |
Freq. used | ¢1, ¢5, ¢10, ¢25, ¢50, ¢100 |
Rarely used | ¢2, ¢3 |
Demographics | |
Date of introduction | 19 July 2003 |
Official user(s) | Creeperopolis El Salvador State of the Church |
Unofficial user(s) | Sequoyah |
Issuance | |
Central bank | Central Reserve Bank of Creeperopolis |
Website | bancocentraldereserva.gob.cr |
Mint | National Mint of Creeperopolis |
Website | mentanacional.gob.cr |
Valuation | |
Inflation | 3.41% |
Source | 2020 |
Method | CPI |
The Creeperian Colón (symbol: ₡; code: CLN; also abbreviated: CLN₡; Creeperian Spanish – Creeperian: Ծոլօն Ծրեեպերիանո; Creeperian Spanish – Iberic: Colón Creeperiano; Creeperian Spanish pronunciation: [koˈlon kri-per-iˈa-no]; plural: Colón or Colónes) is the official currency of Creeperopolis, El Salvador, and the State of the Church. It is also unofficially used by Sequoyah. The Colón was introduced on 17 July 2003 after the Creeperian Dollar was abolished following severe hyperinflation.
The Colón is subdivided into 100 centavos, its ISO 4217 code is CLN, and its ISO 4217 number is 1381, symbolically after the year Admiral Cristóbal Colón Cámarillo discovered the San Carlos Islands, whom the currently is named after. The currency is fiat money and is not backup up by gold or any other material.
Contents
Overview
Constitutionality
The Creeperian Colón is not defined in the Constitution of Creeperopolis nor is the process of minting any currency. The Ministry of the Treasury de facto has the responsibility of minting and issuing the Colón, which it does through the National Mint of Creeperopolis and Central Reserve Bank of Creeperopolis, respectively.
Decimal units
The Colón only has one official decimal unit:
- Centavo (Ծենտավո) (¢): worth one one-hundredth (1⁄100) of a Colón
Etymology
The Colón is named after Admiral Cristóbal Carlos Colón Cámarillo. He was chosen as the namesake of the currency by the Romerist Military Junta because of his importance in Creeperian history and because he has sometimes been associated with establishing the economy of the San Carlos Islands, which has since become one of the strongest in Creeperopolis.
Currency
Coins
Denomination | Front | Reverse | Portrait and design date | Reverse motif and design date | Material | Edge | Circulation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
One Centavo | Cristóbal Colón Cámarillo (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Wide | ||
Two Centavos | Huitzilopochtli (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Limited | ||
Three Centavos | Chepín I (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Limited | ||
Five Centavos | Felipe I (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Wide | ||
Ten Centavos | Alfonso I (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Wide | ||
Twenty-Five Centavos | Miguel I (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
Plain | Wide | ||
Fifty Centavos | Adolfo III (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
100 reeds | Wide | ||
One Colón (One Hundred Centavos) |
Romero I (2003) |
Face value with olive leaves (2003) |
91.67% Ni 9.33% Cu |
110 reeds | Wide |