Casa de Moneda de la República Argentina

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Casa de Moneda de la República Argentina
Buenos Aires - Casa de Moneda (antigua) - 20051212.jpg
Former Casa de Moneda in Buenos Aires centre
Founded/First coin struck: 1779
Governing body: Argentine government
Website: http://www.camoar.gov.ar/INGLES/Eindex2.htm

The Casa de Moneda de la República Argentina is the Argentine mint, controlled by the Argentine government and administratively subordinated to the Ministry of Economy. A mint was established in 1779[citation needed], before Argentina became independent. Law 733 of 1875 ordered the creation of two mints, one in Buenos Aires and another in Salta[1]; the Casa de Moneda in Buenos Aires was opened on 14 February 1881, with ingeniero (engineer) Castilla as director[1].

It produces legal tender coins and banknotes. It also produces medals and security prints (i.e., passports, subway tokens, postage stamps) that are used and issued by government-run service providers. The present currency printed is the Argentine peso, since 1992.

In 1927 the Casa de Moneda Museum was inaugurated, with historical banknotes, coins, postal and other stamps, seals, medals, and others.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b (Spanish) Historia de la moneda
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