-
Republic of Indonesia. It
replaced in 1953 the Bank of Java (Dutch: De
Javasche Bank, DJB),
which had been
created in 1828 to
serve the
financial needs...
- The Bank of Java (Dutch: De
Javasche Bank N.V.,
abbreviated as DJB) was a note-issuing bank in the
Dutch East Indies,
founded in 1828, and nationalized...
- and from 1827 to 1842 and
again from 1866 to 1948
gulden notes of De
Javasche Bank.
Lower denominations (below 5 gulden) were
issued by the government...
-
still bore the
words "guilder", and "De
Javasche Bank",
reusing the 1946 (even
retaining the date, 1946) De
Javasche Bank notes,
changing only the colour...
- De
Javasche Bank in Banjarmasin...
- that had been the
first headquarters of the
Netherlands Indies gulden (De
Javasche bank), the
central bank of the
Dutch East Indies. The bank was nationalized...
-
building was
built on
March 31, 1921 as the
Padang branch office of De
Javasche Bank
before it was
taken over by Bank
Indonesia on July 1, 1953. Completed...
- with an
issue of
government paper in 1815,
withdrawn on 30 June 1861. De
Javasche Bank, the
central bank of the
Netherlands Indies,
eventually to become...
-
after its restoration. The
museum occupies a
building formerly known as De
Javasche Bank, the
central bank of
Dutch East Indies.
After the
Indonesian Independence...
- 1950, the
subsequent liberal democracy period, the
nationalization of De
Javasche Bank into the
modern Bank Indonesia, and the
takeover of
Dutch corporate...