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Albanian lek
Leku Shqiptar (Albanian) |
|
|
| ISO 4217 Code |
ALL |
| User(s) |
Albania |
| Inflation |
4% |
| Source |
The World Factbook, 2008 est. |
| Subunit |
|
| 1/100 |
qindarkë |
| Plural |
lekë |
| qindarkë |
qindarka |
| Coins |
1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 lekë |
| Banknotes |
200, 500, 1000, 2000, 5000 lekë |
| Central bank |
Bank of Albania |
| Website |
www.bankofalbania.org |
The lek (plural lekë) (sign: L; code: ALL) is the currency of Albania. It is subdivided into 100 qindarka (singular qindarkë), although qindarka are no longer issued.
The First Lek (1926 introduced by King Ahmet Zogu) was named after Aleksander the Great (Leka I Madh). The Second Lek (1947) was named after the 15th century Albanian Feudal Lord Lekë Dukagjini. The name qindarkë comes from the Albanian qind, meaning one hundred. Qindarkë thus carries the same meaning as centime, cent, centesimo, stotinka, eurocent, etc.
[edit] First lek
In 1926, bronze coins were introduced in denominations of 5 and 10 qindar leku, together with nickel ¼, ½ and 1 lek, and silver 1, 2 and 5 franga ar. In 1935, bronze 1 and 2 qindar ar were issued, equal in value to the 5 and 10 qindar leku.
After the Italian occupation, stainless-steel 0.20, 0.50, 1 and 2 lek and silver 5 and 10 lek were introduced, with the silver coins only issued that year but aluminium-bronze 0.05 and 0.10 lek introduced in 1940. These coins were issued until 1941.
In 1947, a new coinage was introduced, consisting of zinc ½, 1, 2 and 5 lekë. This coinage was issued until 1957.
[edit] Second lek
In 1965, aluminium coins (dated 1964) were introduced in denominations of 5, 10, 20 and 50 qindar and 1 lek. In 1995 and 1996, a new coinage was introduced in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20 and 50 lekë, with a bimetallic 100 lekë added in 2000.
The obverses have various designs with the inscription "Republika e Shqipërisë" (Republic of Albania) and the year of production. All have the value with branches on the reverse.
[edit] Banknotes
[edit] First lek
In 1926, the National Bank of Albania (Banka Kombëtare e Shqipnis) introduced notes in denominations of 1, 5, 20 and 100 franka ari. In 1939, notes were issued denominated as 5 and 20 franga. These were followed in 1944 with notes for 2, 5 and 10 lek and 100 franga.
In 1945, the People's Bank of Albania (Banka e Shtetit Shqiptar) issued overprints on National Bank notes for 10 lek, 20 and 100 franga. Regular notes were also issued in 1945 in denominations of 1, 5, 20, 100 and 500 franga. In 1947, the lek was adopted as the main denominations, with notes issued for 10, 50, 100, 500 and 1000 lekë.
| 1947 series |
| Value |
Colour |
Obverse |
Reverse |
| 10 lekë |
Peach |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 50 lekë |
Dark green |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 100 lekë |
Dark blue |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 500 lekë |
Brown |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 1,000 lekë |
Dark blue/multicoloured |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 1949 and 1957 series |
| Value |
Colour |
Obverse |
Reverse |
| 10 lekë |
Red |
Coat of arms |
Coat of arms |
| 50 lekë |
Dark blue |
Skanderbeg |
Partisan |
| 100 lekë |
Green |
Partisan |
Geometric designs |
| 500 lekë |
Orange/blue |
Wheat harvesting, Skanderbeg |
Peasant woman with wheat |
| 1,000 lekë |
Purple |
Skanderbeg, oil wells |
A miner |
[edit] Second lek
In 1965, notes (dated 1964) were introduced by the Banka e Shtetit Shqiptar in denominations of 1, 3, 5, 10, 25, 50 and 100 lekë. A second series of notes was issued in 1976 when the country changed its name to the People's Socialist Republic.
| 1964 and 1976 series |
| Obverse |
Reverse |
Value |
Colour |
Obverse |
Reverse |
 |
 |
1 lek |
Green |
Peasant couple with wheat |
Castle of Shkodër |
 |
 |
3 lekë |
Brown |
Woman carrying basket of fruit |
Sea/lakeside town (?) |
 |
 |
5 lekë |
Dark blue |
Steam train and truck |
Ship |
 |
 |
10 lekë |
Green |
Woman working in a textile mill |
Bureaucrats and peasants socializing outside the Palace of Culture, Naim Frashëri |
 |
 |
25 lekë |
Dark blue |
Woman with wheat, combine harvesting |
Mechanized ploughing |
 |
 |
50 lekë |
Red |
Army on parade, Skanderbeg |
Rifle, pickaxe, apartment block under construction |
|
|
100 lekë |
Scarlet |
Man showing his son a new hydroelectric dam |
Steelworker with oil worker, gesturing grandly, steelworks and oil wells in background |
| Undated issue |
| Obverse |
Reverse |
Value |
Colour |
Obverse |
Reverse |
|
|
100 lekë |
Blue |
Steelworker pouring an ingot, steelworks in background |
Mountains and oil wells |
In 1991, 500 lekë were introduced, followed by denominations of 200 and 1000 lekë in 1992, and 5000 lekë in 1996.
| 1991 series |
| Obverse |
Reverse |
Value |
Colour |
Obverse |
Reverse |
|
|
100 lekë |
Purple |
Oil refinery |
Oil wells, steelworkers, steelworks |
 |
 |
500 lekë |
Light blue |
Girl with sunflowers |
Mountains |
Current ALL exchange rates
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links