Description
The Djibouti franc has been the official currency in Djibouti since 1908. In 1884, when the country was still part of French Somaliland (formerly Djibouti), the French franc was a bargaining chip alongside the Indian rupee and the Thaler Maria Theresa. However, since 1908, the franc circulating in Djibouti fixed its value to the French franc. Between 1920 and 1965, the Chamber of Commerce announced coins in denominations of 5, 10, 25 and centimes and 1, 10, 20, 50 and 100 francs, followed by the 500 francs coin in 1989. The last coin issued to complete the country coins denomination was the 250 francs in 2013.
The 250 Djiboutian francs coin front design features the National Coat of Arms (It is bordered with laurel branches, consist of a vertical spear, a shield, two hands that carry a machete and a spear with a red star above) and the issue date. The reverse coin design illustrates the Djibouti National bird, Djibouti spurfowl or Djibouti francolin, and the motto: “Unite-Egalite-Peace” (Unity-Equality-Peace), with the denomination below. This coin is part of the 2012 series, its rim is fluted, and its color is silver and gold.
Text: Republique De Djibouti, Unite, Egalite, Paix, 250 Francs, 2012.