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10 Konvertibilnih Maraka – Bosnia and Herzegovina

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Princess Diana
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Context
Year: 1998
Currency:
(since 1998)
Total mintage: 10,000
Material
Diameter: 38.61 mm
Weight: 28.28 g
Silver weight: 26.16 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard99
Numista: #51937
Value
Exchange value: 10 BAM
Bullion value: $74.36

Obverse

Description:
National arms above, date below.
Inscription:
BOSNA I HERCEGOVINA

1998
Translation:
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA

1998
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Portrait and map separate dates, denomination below.
Inscription:
1961 • Diana - Princess of Wales • 1997 •

10

MARAKA
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded.

Categories

Map

Mints

NameMark
Pobjoy MintPM

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1998PM10,000Proof

Historical background

In 1998, Bosnia and Herzegovina operated under a unique and complex monetary framework established by the Dayton Peace Agreement of 1995. The country did not have a single, unified central bank issuing a national currency. Instead, monetary authority was vested in the Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina (CBBH), an institution designed to be strictly currency board-based and independent of any of the country's three main ethnic-political entities. Its primary mandate was to ensure monetary stability by pegging a new unified currency, the Convertible Mark (KM or BAM), at a fixed 1:1 parity to the Deutsche Mark.

This system was a direct response to the wartime monetary chaos, where the Yugoslav Dinar, the Croatian Kuna, and various makeshift "Bosnian Dinars" had circulated in divided territories. The introduction of the Convertible Mark in 1997-98 was a cornerstone of post-war economic reconstruction, symbolizing a fragile unity and providing a stable foundation for trade and aid. The currency board arrangement meant the CBBH could only issue domestic currency fully backed by foreign reserves (primarily Deutsche Marks), eliminating discretionary monetary policy and imposing strict fiscal discipline on the entity governments.

Consequently, by 1998, the currency situation was one of imposed stability but underlying political fragility. The Convertible Mark was successfully established as a trusted medium of exchange across the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska, helping to curb inflation and facilitate international assistance. However, this stability was entirely imported, reliant on the strength of the Deutsche Mark. The system effectively outsourced monetary sovereignty, which was a necessary compromise to prevent economic competition between the entities but also highlighted the deep political divisions that a shared currency alone could not overcome.
Legendary