Armenian dram

Currency of Armenia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Armenian dram

The Armenian dram (Armenian: դրամ; sign: ֏; abbreviation: դր.; ISO code: AMD) is the currency of Armenia. It was historically subdivided into 100 luma (լումա). The Central Bank of Armenia is responsible for issuance and circulation of dram banknotes and coins, as well as implementing the monetary policy of Armenia.

Quick Facts Հայկական Դրամ, ISO 4217 ...
Armenian dram
Հայկական Դրամ (Armenian)
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֏100,000 banknote, the highest denominated banknote in circulation.
ISO 4217
CodeAMD (numeric: 051)
Subunit0.01
Unit
PluralThe language(s) of this currency do(es) not have a morphological plural distinction.
Symbol֏
Denominations
Subunit
1100luma (լումա)
Banknotes
Freq. used֏1,000, ֏2,000, ֏5,000, ֏10,000, ֏20,000, ֏50,000
Rarely used֏50, ֏100, ֏500, ֏100,000
Coins
Freq. used֏10, ֏20, ֏50, ֏100, ֏200, ֏500
Rarely used10, 20, 50 luma, ֏1, ֏3, ֏5
Demographics
Date of introduction22 November 1993
ReplacedSoviet rouble (SUR)
Official user(s) Armenia
Unofficial user(s) Georgia: Javakheti (Javakhk) region (de facto until c. 2005)[1][2][3]
Issuance
Central bankCentral Bank of Armenia
Websitewww.cba.am
Valuation
Inflation-0.6%
Source, December 2023
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The word dram means "money" and is cognate with the Greek drachma and the Arabic dirham, as well as the English weight unit dram.

History

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Perspective

The first instance of a "dram" currency was in the period from 1199 to 1375, when silver coins called dram or tram were issued.[4] Dram or Takvorin coinage would periodically continue to be produced for some time until the loss of Armenia's independence. The establishment of Russian Armenia saw the adoption of the Imperial ruble, followed by a series of attempts to localize the Russian ruble under the Soviet Union and Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). On 21 September 1991, a national referendum proclaimed Armenia as a republic independent from the Soviet Union. The Central Bank of Armenia, established on 27 March 1993, was given the exclusive right of issuing the national currency.

In the immediate aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union attempts were made to maintain a common currency (the Russian rouble) among CIS states. Armenia joined this rouble zone. However it soon became clear that maintaining a currency union in the unstable political and economical circumstances of the post-Soviet states would be very difficult. The Rouble Zone effectively collapsed with the unilateral 1993 Russian monetary reform process. As a result, the remaining CIS participants – Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Moldova, Armenia and Georgia – were 'pushed out' and forced to introduce separate currencies. Armenia was one of the last countries to do so when it introduced the dram on 22 November 1993.[5]

Armenian dram sign

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The dram sign

As the result of common business practice and the unique pattern of Armenian letters, the shape of the sign and its variations appeared in the business scratches (daybooks). Until the official endorsement of the sign a number of artists and businessmen developed and offered various shapes for it. Now the dram symbol is included in the Armenian standard for the national characters and symbols and in the Armenian computer fonts. The current standard sign for the Armenian dram (֏, image: ֏; Armenian: Դրամ; code: AMD) was designed in 1995. In Unicode, it is encoded at U+058F ֏ ARMENIAN DRAM SIGN.

Coins

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In 1994, a first series of aluminium coins was introduced in denominations of 10, 20, and 50 luma, 1, 3, 5, and 10 drams. In 2003 and 2004, a second series consisting of 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 dram coins was introduced to replace the first series.

The Central Bank has also issued a great number of commemorative coins intended for sale to collectors. A listing can be found at the authorized central bank distributors.[6][7]

First series (1994–2002)

In 1994, a first series of aluminium coins was introduced in denominations of 10, 20, and 50 luma, 1, 3, 5, and 10 drams. The other coins are officially in circulation but rarely used because of their low nominal value.[8][9]

More information First series (1994), Image ...
First series (1994)
ImageValueTechnical parametersDescription
ObverseReverseDiameterMassCompositionEdgeObverseReverse
10 luma[10] 16 mm 0.6 g Aluminium Smooth Armenian coat of arms Value, year of minting
20 luma[11] 18 mm 0.75 g
50 luma[12] 20 mm 0.95 g
֏1[13] 22 mm 1.4 g Reeded
֏3[14] 24 mm 1.65 g
Thumb Thumb ֏5[15] 26 mm 2 g Smooth
Thumb Thumb ֏10[16] 28 mm 2.3 g
These images are to scale at 2.5 pixels per millimetre. For table standards, see the coin specification table.
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  • All coins bear the year of the first issue (1994).

Second series (2003–present)

In 2003 and 2004, a new series of coins was introduced in denominations of 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 drams.

More information Second series (2003-2004), Image ...
Second series (2003-2004)
ImageValueTechnical parametersDescription
ObverseReverseDiameterMassCompositionEdgeObverseReverse
֏10[17] 20 mm 1.3 g Aluminium Reeded Armenian coat of arms Value, ornaments,
year of minting
֏20[18] 20.5 mm 2.75 g Copper-plated Steel Smooth
֏50[19] 21.5 mm 3.45 g Brass-plated steel Reeded
֏100[20] 22.5 mm 4 g Nickel-plated Steel
֏200[21] 24 mm 4.5 g Brass
֏500[22] 22 mm 5 g Bi-Metallic Copper-nickel center in Brass ring Segmented reeding
These images are to scale at 2.5 pixels per millimetre. For table standards, see the coin specification table.
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  • All coins bear the year of the first issue (2003 or 2004).

Banknotes

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Perspective

A first series of banknotes was issued in November 1993. It was withdrawn from circulation by 2005. A second series was issued from 1998 onwards which is still in use at present.

First series (1993–1998)

On 22 November 1993, banknotes of 10, 25, 50, 100, 200, and 500 drams were issued.[23] Notes for ֏1,000 and ֏5,000 were put into circulation later.

More information First series (1993–1998), Image ...
First series (1993–1998)
ImageValueDimensionsMain ColorDescription
ObverseReverseObverseReverse
Thumb Thumb ֏10 125 x 62 mm Brown and purple Yerevan Train Station and David of Sasun statue Mount Ararat
Thumb Thumb ֏25 Yellow, brown and blue Urartian cuneiform tablet and a lion relief from Erebuni fortress Ornaments
Thumb Thumb ֏50 Blue and red National Gallery and History Museum of Armenia Armenian parliament building
Thumb Thumb ֏100 Blue, purple and red Mount Ararat and Zvartnots Cathedral Yerevan Opera Theatre
Thumb Thumb ֏200 135 x 62 mm Brown,green, yellow and red Saint Hripsime Church in Echmiadzin Ornaments
Thumb Thumb ֏500 Green, brown and blue Mount Ararat and a Tigranes the Great tetradrachm
Thumb Thumb ֏1,000 145 x 68 mm Brown and orange Mesrop Mashtots statue and Matenadaran 7th century obelisk monument in Aghitu Memorial
Thumb Thumb ֏5,000 145 x 71 mm Green, yellow and purple Temple of Garni Bronze head of goddess Anahit (Satala Aphrodite) kept in the British Museum
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.
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Second series (1998–2017)

Banknotes of ֏50, ֏100, and ֏500 are rarely seen in circulation. Coins of ֏50, ֏100, and ֏500 are used instead.
A commemorative ֏50,000 note was issued on 4 June 2001 in commemoration of the 1,700th anniversary of the adoption of Christianity in Armenia.

More information Second series (1998–2017), Image ...
Second series (1998–2017)
ImageValueDimensionsMain ColorDescription
ObverseReverseObverseReverse
Thumb Thumb ֏50 122 x 65  mm Pink, blue and grey Aram Khachaturian (1903–1978) and Armenian Opera Theater A scene from the ballet Gayane by Khachaturian, and Mount Ararat
Thumb Thumb ֏100 Blue and grey Viktor Hambardzumyan (1908–1996) Byurakan Observatory
Thumb Thumb ֏500 129 x 72 mm Grey Alexander Tamanian (1878–1936) Government House in Yerevan designed by Alexander Tamanyan
Thumb Thumb ֏1,000 136 x 72 mm Green and pink Yeghishe Charents (1897–1937) An image of old Yerevan depicting the government building of the First Republic
Thumb Thumb ֏5,000 143 x 72 mm Yellow and green Hovhannes Tumanyan (1869–1923) Nature scene from Lori, from one of Martiros Saryan's paintings
Thumb Thumb ֏10,000 150 x 72 mm Purple Avetik Isahakyan (1875–1957) An image of old Gyumri
Thumb Thumb ֏20,000 155 x 72 mm Yellow, red and brown Martiros Saryan (1880–1972) Detail from an Armenian landscape by Martiros Saryan
Thumb Thumb ֏50,000 160 x 79 mm Brown and red Etchmiadzin Cathedral St. Gregory the Illuminator and king Tiridates the Great holding a symbol representing the Armenian Church; on the right, a khachkar from Kecharis Monastery.
Thumb Thumb ֏100,000 160 x 72 mm Blue Abgar V of Edessa Abgar V of Edessa receiving the mandylion from St. Thaddeus (not pictured).[24]
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.
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500 dram commemorative note (2017)

A 500 dram commemorative note was issued on 22 November 2017 to commemorate both the story of Noah's Ark and the 25th anniversary of Armenia's national currency.[25]

More information commemorative note (2017), Image ...
commemorative note (2017)
ImageValueDimensionsMain ColorDescription
ObverseReverseObverseReverse
Thumb Thumb ֏500 140 × 76 mm Brown and grey Reliquary containing a fragment of Noah's Ark (left); etching by Friedrich Parrot of Etchmiadzin Cathedral with Mount Ararat in the background Etching by Jacob Carolsfeld of Noah, his family members and animals against the background of Mount Ararat
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.
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Third series (2018–present)

A third series of Armenian dram banknotes was issued in 2018, All denominations for this series are the same as its previous issues, with the 2,000 dram banknote as a newly introduced denomination, the 50,000 dram banknote re-issued for this series and the omission of the 50, 100, 500, and 100,000 dram banknotes for this issue. The new series are printed on hybrid substrates of Louisenthal.[26]

The first three denominations, ֏10,000, ֏20,000 and ֏50,000, were issued on November 22, 2018 to mark 25 years of Armenian currency. The final three denominations, ֏1,000, ֏2,000 and ֏5,000 were issued on December 25, 2018.

More information Third series (2018–present), Image ...
Third series (2018–present)
ImageValueDimensionsMain ColorDescription
ObverseReverseObverseReverse
Thumb Thumb ֏1,000 130 × 72 mm Violet Paruyr Sevak (1924–1971), poems Paryur Sevak house (museum), Zangakatun; statue of Sevak
Thumb Thumb ֏2,000 135 × 72 mm Brown Tigran Petrosian (1929–1984), chessboard Tigran Petrosian Chess House (Yerevan), statue of Petrosyan
Thumb Thumb ֏5,000 140 × 72 mm Red William Saroyan (1908–1981), covers from Saroyan's books, mountain Statue of Saroyan (Yerevan)
Thumb Thumb ֏10,000 145 × 72 mm Gray-purple Komitas (1869–1935) Gevorgian Seminary and statue of Komitas, Vagharshapat (Etchmiadzin)
Thumb Thumb ֏20,000 150 × 72 mm Green Ivan Aivazovsky (1817–1900) Aivazovsky National Art Gallery Museum and statue of Aivazovskiy, Feodosia (Crimea)
Thumb Thumb ֏50,000 155 × 72 mm Gold Saint Gregory the Illuminator (257–331), manuscripts telling the life of St. Gregory, images of the dome of the Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin and the winged cross Khor Virap monastery (Chapel of St. Gregory), Ararat Plain, tombstone of St. Gregory the Illuminator (Etchmiadzin), statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.
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Exchange rates

The modern dram came into effect on 22 November 1993, at a rate of Rbls 200 = 1 dram (US$1 = 404 drams).

More information Current AMD exchange rates ...
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Note: Rates obtained from these websites may be slightly different from the rates the Central Bank of Armenia publishes

See also

References

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