- Italian Somaliland somalo
The somalo (plural: "somali", صومالي) was the currency of the Trust Territory of Somalia between
1950 and1962 . It was subdivided into 100 "centesimi" (singular: "centesimo").History
The somalo was authorized by Trusteeship Administration Ordinance No. 14 of 16 May 1950. A currency exchange was scheduled to last from 16 May until 22 July, but was eventually extended until 22 August. The somalo replaced the
East African shilling at par and remained equal to it. It replaced the small amount of Italian lire in circulation at 1 somalo = Lit 87.49. It was given an IMF parity of 124.414mg fine gold, equal to one shilling sterling. Internationally, this currency became known as the "Somali shilling" when Somalia became independent on 1 July 1960. The somalo/shilling was replaced at par on 15 December 1962 (along with the East African shilling circulating inBritish Somaliland ) by the "Somali scellino" (Somali shilling).Coins
In 1950, coins were introduced in denominations of 1, 5, 10 and 50 centesimi and 1 somalo. The three lower denominations were minted in copper, with the higher two being struck in silver.
Banknotes
The "Cassa per la Circolazione Monetaria della Somalia", headquartered in Rome, began operations 18 April 1950 and was authorized to issue 55 million shillings in paper money. It released notes in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20 and 100 somali on 22 May 1950. A smaller version of the 5-somali note was put into circulation in May 1951. These notes were withdrawn beginning 15 December 1962 and ceased to be legal tender on 31 December 1963.
References
*numis cite SCWC | date=1991
*numis cite SCWPM | date=1994External links
Standard numismatics external links
world_coin_gallery_1_url = Somalia
world_coin_gallery_1_name = Somalia
banknote_world_1_url = somalia
banknote_world_1_name = Italian Somaliland
dollarization_1_url = so
dollarization_1_name = Somalia
gfd_1_url = Somalia
gfd_1_name = Somalia
gfd_data_1_url =
gfd_data_1_name =
show_gfd_excel = Y
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