Azərbaycan manatı (Azerbaijani) | |||||
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ISO 4217 | |||||
Code | AZN (numeric: 944) | ||||
Subunit | 0.01 | ||||
Unit | |||||
Plural | The language(s) of this currency do(es) not have a morphological plural distinction. | ||||
Symbol | ₼ or m | ||||
Denominations | |||||
Subunit | |||||
1⁄100 | qəpik | ||||
Banknotes | |||||
Freq. used | 1₼, 5₼, 10₼, 20₼, 50₼, 100₼, 200₼ | ||||
Rarely used | 500₼ | ||||
Coins | 1, 3, 5, 10, 20, 50 qəpik | ||||
Demographics | |||||
User(s) | ![]() | ||||
Issuance | |||||
Central bank | Central Bank of Azerbaijan | ||||
Website | www | ||||
Valuation | |||||
Inflation | 3% H1 2018 | ||||
Source | MENAFN | ||||
Method | CPI |
The manat (code: AZN ; symbol: ₼orm) is the currencyofAzerbaijan. It is subdivided into 100 qəpik.
The first iteration of the currency happened in the times of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and its successor, the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic, with the issues happening in 1919-1923. The currency underwent hyperinflation, and was eventually substituted by the Transcaucasian ruble, which, in its turn, was converted to the Soviet rouble. In Soviet times, the common currency of the USSR was known as manat in Azeri language.
When Azerbaijan gained independence from the Soviet Union, it substituted the Soviet rouble with the manat, which also went through a period of high inflation in the first years, rendering the coinage obsolete. The current manat in circulation exists since the denomination in 2006, when 5,000 old manat were substituted with the new currency, which bears some resemblance to the euro. The currency has mostly been pegged to the United States dollar, at what is now the rate of 1.70₼ to US$1.
The Azerbaijani manat symbol, ₼ ( ), was assigned to Unicode U+20BC in 2013. A lowercase m was used previously, and may still be encountered when the manat symbol is unavailable.
The word "manat" is derived from the Persian word "munāt" and the Russian word "монета" ("moneta") meaning "coin".[1] It was used as the name of the Soviet currency in Azeri (Azerbaijani: манат) and in Turkmen.
The Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and its successor the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic issued their own currency between 1919 and 1923. The currency was called the manat (منات) in Azerbaijani and the rouble (рубль) in Russian, with the denominations written in both languages (and sometimes also in French) on the banknotes. The manat replaced the first Transcaucasian rouble at par and was replaced by the second Transcaucasian rouble after Azerbaijan became part of the Transcaucasian Soviet Federal Socialist Republic. No subdivisions were issued, and the currency only existed as banknotes.
The Democratic Republic issued notes in denominations of 25, 50, 100, 250 and 500 manat, whilst the Soviet Socialist Republic issued notes in denominations of 5; 100; 1,000; 5,000; 10,000; 25,000; 50,000; 100,000; 250,000; 1 million and 5 million manat.
The second manat was introduced on 15 August 1992.[2] It had the ISO 4217 code AZM and replaced the rouble at a rate of 10 Rbls to 1m.
From early 2002 to early 2005, the exchange rate was fairly stable (varying within a band of 4,770–4,990m per US dollar). Starting in the spring of 2005 there was a slight but steady increase in the value of the manat against the US dollar; the reason most likely being the increased flow of petrodollars into the country, together with the generally high price of oil on the world market. At the end of 2005, one dollar was worth 4,591m. Banknotes below 100m had effectively disappeared by 2005, as had the qəpik coins.
Coins were issued in denominations of 5, 10, 20 and 50 qəpik, dated 1992 and 1993. Although brass and cupronickel were used for some of the 1992 issues, later issues were all in aluminium. These coins were rarely used in circulation.
The following banknotes were issued for this currency
Image | Value | Size
(mm) |
Main colours | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Obverse | Reverse | Obverse | Reverse | ||||
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1m | 125×63 | pink | Maiden TowerinBaku | inscription
«AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI» |
1992 |
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yellow, blue | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «BİR manat» |
1993 | |||
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5m | 125×63 | brown, violet | Maiden TowerinBaku | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «BEŞ manat» |
1993 |
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10m | 125×63 | brown | Maiden TowerinBaku | надпись
«AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI» |
1992 |
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teal | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «ON manat» |
1993 | |||
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50m | 125×63 | red, grey | Maiden TowerinBaku | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «ƏLLİ manat» |
1993
1999 |
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100m | 125×63 | pink, blue | Maiden TowerinBaku | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «YÜZ manat» |
1993
1999 |
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250m | 125×63 | green | Maiden TowerinBaku | inscription
«AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI» |
1992
1999 |
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500m | 125×63 | brown, blue and orange | Portrait of Nizami Ganjavi | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «BEŞ YÜZ manat» |
1993
1999 |
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1,000m | 125×63 | brown and blue | Portrait of Mahammad Amin Rasulzade | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «min 1000 manat» |
1993
1999 |
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blue | Oil industry theme | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «MİN 1000 manat» |
2001 | ||
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10,000m | 130×65 | brown | Palace of the Shirvanshahs | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «ON MİN 10 000 manat» |
1994 |
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50,000m | 132×66 | green | Momine Khatun Mausoleum | inscription «AZƏRBAYCAN MİLLİ BANKI»
and denomination «ƏLLİ MİN 50 000 manat» |
1995 |
On 1 January 2006, a new manat (ISO 4217 code AZN, also called the "manat (national currency)") was introduced at a ratio of 1₼ to 5,000m. From 1 October 2005, prices were indicated both in new manat and in old manat to ease the transition. Coins denominated in qəpik, which had not been used from 1993 onward due to inflation, were reintroduced with the re-denomination. The former manat (ISO code 4217 AZM) remained in use through to 31 December 2006.[3]
The new banknotes and Azerbaijani Manat symbol, ₼, were designed by Robert Kalina in 2006, and the symbol was added to Unicode (U+20BC) in 2013, after failed addition proposals between 2008 and 2011.[4] The final Azerbaijani Manat symbol design was inspired by the design of the Euro sign (€), based on an initial proposal by Mykyta Yevstifeyev,[5] and resembles a single-bar Euro sign rotated 90° clockwise. The manat symbol is displayed to the right of the amount.
The new manat was initially assigned the code AYM on being added to the ISO 4217 standard on 1 June 2005, with an effective date of 1 January 2006.[6] However, this was removed and replaced by AZN on 13 October 2005 as it did not comply with the ISO 4217 currency coding standardization rules (which state that currency codes must begin with the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code for the relevant country).[7]
Coins in circulation are 1, 3, 5, 10, 20 and 50 qəpik. Most coins closely resemble the size and shape of various euro coins. Most notably the bimetallic 50 qəpik (similar to the €2 coin) and the 10 qəpik (Spanish flower, like the 20 euro cent coin). Coins were first put into circulation during January 2006 and do not feature a mint year.
Image | Value | Technical parameters | Description | |||||
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Obverse | Reverse | Diameter | Mass | Composition | Edge | Obverse | Reverse | |
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1 qəpik | 16.25 mm | 2.8 g | Copper-plated steel | Plain | Map of Azerbaijan, country name, value | Traditional musical instruments, denomination left |
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3 qəpik | 18 mm | 3.45 g | Smooth with a groove | Books and quill, denomination above | ||
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5 qəpik | 19.75 mm | 4.85 g | Reeded | The Maiden Tower, denomination below | ||
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10 qəpik | 22.25 mm | 5.1 g | Brass-plated steel | Smooth with seven indentations | Military helmet of the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, denomination left | |
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20 qəpik | 24.25 mm | 6.6 g | Segmented reeding | Spiral staircase, Geometry & Geometrical symbols, denomination left | ||
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50 qəpik | 25.5 mm | 7.7 g | Bi-Metallic Brass-plated steel center in Stainless Steel ring | Reeding over lettering (AZƏRBAYCAN RESPUBLIKASI) | Two oil wells, denomination left |
Banknotes in circulation are 1₼, 5₼, 10₼, 20₼, 50₼, 100₼, 200₼, and 500₼. They were designed by Austrian banknote designer Robert Kalina, who also designed the current banknotes of the euro and the Syrian pound. The notes look quite similar to those of the euro and the choice of motifs was inspired by the euro banknotes.
In 2009 the Azərbaycan Milli Bankı (National Bank of Azerbaijan) was renamed the Azərbaycan Respublikasının Mərkəzi Bankı (Central Bank of Azerbaijan). In 2010, the 1₼ banknote was issued with the new name of the issuing bank, in 2012 a 5₼ banknote was issued with the new name of the issuing bank and in 2017 a 100₼ banknote dated 2013 was issued with the new name of the issuing bank.
In 2011 Azerbaijan's Ministry of Finance announced it was considering issuing notes of 2₼ and 3₼ as well as notes with values larger than 100₼.[8] In February 2013 the Central Bank of Azerbaijan announced it would not introduce larger denomination notes until at least 2014.[9]
In 2018, a 200₼ banknote was issued to commemorate Heydar Aliyev's 95th birthday.[10]
Redesigned 1₼, 5₼, and 50₼ banknotes were introduced in 2021, preserving the same motifs but with updated designs.[11] These circulate in parallel with existing notes.
A new commemorative 500₼ banknote was introduced in 2021.[12]
Image | Value | Dimensions | Main Color | Description | Year | ||
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Obverse | Reverse | Obverse | Reverse | ||||
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1₼ | 120 × 70 mm | Grey | Theme: Culture Azerbaijani folk music instruments (daf, kamancheh, tar) |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2005 |
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2009, 2017 | |||||
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5₼ | 127 × 70 mm | Orange | Theme: Writing and literature Writers, poets, and books from Azerbaijan, with a written excerpt of the national anthem (Namusunu hifz etmeyə, Bayrağını yükseltməyə, Çümlə gənclər müştaqdır! Şanlı Vətən! Şanlı Vətən! Azərbaycan! Azərbaycan!) and letters from the contemporary Azerbaijani alphabet (ə, ö, ğ, ş) |
Rock drawings of Gobustan, samples of Old Turkic script | 2005 |
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2009, 2017 | |||||
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10₼ | 134 × 70 mm | Teal | Theme: History Old Baku, the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and the Maiden Tower against a background of the Icheri Sheher wall |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2005 |
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2018 | |||||
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20₼ | 141 × 70 mm | Green | Theme: Karabakh Signs of power (a sword, a helmet and a shield) |
Symbol of peace (harybulbul) | 2005 |
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50₼ | 148 × 70 mm | Yellow | Theme: History and future Youth, stairs (as a symbol of progress), the sun (as a symbol of force and light) and chemical and mathematical symbols (as signs of science) |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2005 |
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100₼ | 155 × 70 mm | Mauve | Theme: Economy and development Architectural symbols from antiquity up to today, the manat currency symbol (₼) and symbols of economic growth |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2005 |
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2013 | |||||
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200₼ | 160 × 70 mm | Blue | Theme: Modern architecture The Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2018 |
Image | Value | Dimensions | Main Color | Description | Year | ||
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Obverse | Reverse | Obverse | Reverse | ||||
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1₼ | 120 × 70 mm | Grey | Theme: Culture Azerbaijani folk music instruments (daf, kamancheh, tar) |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2020 |
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5₼ | 127 × 70 mm | Orange | Theme: Writing and literature Writers, poets, and books from Azerbaijan, with a written excerpt of the national anthem (Namusunu hifz etmeyə, Bayrağını yükseltməyə, Çümlə gənclər müştaqdır! Şanlı Vətən! Şanlı Vətən! Azərbaycan! Azərbaycan!) and letters from the contemporary Azerbaijani alphabet (ə, ö, ğ, ş) |
Rock drawings of Gobustan, samples of Old Turkic script | |
File:10 manat 2022 (1).jpg | ![]() |
10₼ | 134 × 70 mm | Teal | Theme: History
Old Baku, the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and the Maiden Toweragainst a background of the Icheri Sheher wall |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2022 |
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20₼ | 141 × 70 mm | Green | Theme: Karabakh Signs of power (a sword, a helmet and a shield) |
Symbol of peace (harybulbul) | 2022 |
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50₼ | 148 × 70 mm | Yellow and brown | Theme: History and future Youth, stairs (as a symbol of progress), the sun (as a symbol of force and light) and chemical and mathematical symbols (as signs of science) |
Ornaments of regional carpets | 2020 |
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500₼
(commemorative) |
165 × 70 mm | Brown, red, and green | Theme: The 2020 Karabakh War |
Mausoleum of Molla Panah Vagif; Askeran fortress | 2021 |
Current AZN exchange rates | |
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From Google Finance: | AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB TRY GEL |
From Yahoo! Finance: | AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB TRY GEL |
From XE.com: | AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB TRY GEL |
From OANDA: | AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB TRY GEL |
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