The emerged as the official currency of the
Burgundian Netherlands after the 1434 monetary reform done under
Philip the Good.
1434–1466: Burgundian Netherlands Philip the Good devised a monetary system in 1434 relating the new Dutch currency to that of its neighbors: the French of 38.25 g silver, and the English
pound sterling of 215.8 g. The following units were defined: • The of 1.63 g fine silver, equal to 2 Flemish grote or 3 Brabant grote, and approximately equal to the French (shilling) of 1.9125 g; • The , equal to 20 stuiver or 32.6 g fine silver, and approximately equal to the French . As the French gold livre was about par with the gold
florin of 3.5 g, this new denomination was therefore known as the , or gulden, or florin. • The shilling Flemish (), equal to 12 Flemish grote or 6 stuivers, and approximately equal to the
English shilling of 12 pence sterling. • And finally, the pound Flemish (), equal to 240 Flemish grote or 6 gulden, and at 195.6 g fine silver was approximately equal to the English
pound sterling. The weighed 3.4 g of silver fineness and was divided into 8 or 16 . As each stuiver was worth approximately 2 English pence, Dutch silver denominations of 1 duit and , , 1 and 2 stuivers neatly matched with English denominations of , , 1, 2 and 4 pence sterling (the latter two sterling coins were rarely minted). French
écus,
English nobles and Dutch florins comprised the gold currency of the Low Countries and had a variable rate against the stuiver. A denomination worth 1 gulden did not exist until the 1464 issue of the containing 2.735 g of fine gold, but this was a mere two years before the resumption of debasements in the stuiver.
1500–1560: Spanish Netherlands from 1469 to 1475. The
stuiver modestly depreciated between 1466 and 1475 before incurring more significant debasements up to the end of the 15th century. From 1469 to 1475 an agreement with England made the English groat (4-
pence; 2.88 g fine silver) mutually exchangeable with the Burgundian (or 2-) minted under
Charles the Bold. Follow-up attempts to issue 1-gulden coins resulted in the minting of the gold Karolusgulden of 1.77 g fine gold in 1520, and the silver Karolusgulden of 19.07 grams fine silver in 1541. The bullion content of French and English currencies would eventually approach this value, with the French livre parisis becoming 20.4 g fine silver in 1549, and th of a
pound sterling (3 shillings and 4 pence) becoming 19.2 g fine silver in 1551.
1618: Dutch Republic The pace of depreciation of the Gulden quickened in the second half of the 16th century amidst the huge influx of precious metals from Germany and Spanish America arriving through the
Habsburg Netherlands. The loss in silver content of local Dutch coins in the form of , (6 stuivers) and
daalders ( gulden or 30 stuivers) was the result of different provinces continually testing the market with coins of slightly reduced silver, aiming for their acceptance at par with full-bodied coins. As the Northern
Dutch Republic just declared its independence from the Spanish crown, there was no central authority powerful enough to penalize the provinces responsible for the deterioration of the quality of Dutch currency. The inevitable official acceptance of new, debased rates for the gulden only set the stage for the next round of depreciations. As a result, the gulden equivalent of different trade coins passing through the Low Countries also rose in value, as follows: • The German of 25.98 g fine silver was valued at 32 stuivers (1.6 G) in 1566. • The Dutch Republic's (lion dollar) of 20.57 g fine silver was valued at 32 stuivers (1.6 G) in 1575. • The Dutch Republic's
Rijksdaalder of 25.40 g fine silver, a local version of the German reichsthaler, was valued at 42 stuivers (2.1 G) in 1583, and repeatedly raised in value until it reached 50 stuivers (2.5 G) in 1618 – hence, 10.16 g silver in a gulden. • The
Spanish Netherlands' or Albertus thaler of 24.56 g fine silver, valued at 8 shillings Flemish (48 stuivers, 2.4 G) in 1618. • The Spanish Netherlands' ducaton of 30.70 g fine silver, valued at 10 shillings Flemish (60 stuivers, 3 G) in 1618. The solution which immediately halted the downward spiral of the gulden was the establishment of the
Amsterdam Wisselbank (Bank of Amsterdam) in 1609, mandated to accept and assay the bullion content of coins received from its depositors, and then to credit the equivalent of 1 Rijksdaalder ( gulden after 1618) for each 25.40 g fine silver actually received. Combined with rules requiring payments above 600 gulden to be cleared through the bank, it halted incentives for provinces to tamper with the silver content of its coins. In 1626, Pieter Schaghen wrote in Dutch of the purchase of "the Island Manhattes" (
Manhattan) "from the Indians for the value of 60 guilders".
1659: Gulden currency and banco : 3 gulden
Utrecht, Dutch Republic, 1795 Even with the
Bank of Amsterdam's success in halting the depreciation of Dutch currency, attempts to further increase the stuiver equivalent of trade coins continued among the provinces. After the 1630s came moves to raise the Patagon's value from 48 to 50 stuivers (4.17% advance), followed by moves to raise the Ducaton's value from 60 to 63 stuivers (5.0% advance). Fearing damage to its Europe-wide reputation if 50-stuiver deposits in rixdollars were repaid in cheaper 50-stuiver patagons, in the 1640s the bank firmly rejected the advanced values of these coins and upheld its old values of 48 and 60 stuivers. This was the origin of a permanent Gulden Banco valued at 5% more against provincial Gulden currency valuations. In 1659 the Dutch Republic made this duality permanent by issuing its own trade coins, namely: • The silver ducat (; also called ) of 24.36 g fine silver, replacing the Patagon and valued at 48 stuivers banco (2.4 GB) or 50 stuivers currency (2.5 G). • The
Silver Rider Ducaton of 30.45 g fine silver, replacing the Ducaton and valued at 60 stuivers banco (3 GB) or 63 stuivers currency (3.15 G). The result was a
gulden banco unit of 10.15 g silver and a
gulden currency unit of 9.67 g silver as determined from the ducaton. These reforms helped cement the
Dutch Republic's role as Europe's financial center, made the
Bank of Amsterdam the world's first modern central bank, and made the bank-stabilized gulden as Europe's reserve currency until the end of the 18th century. In 1694, a new mint ordinance recognized the gulden as a valid coin for the entire Republic. As the bank was also an active reseller of , or trade coins that happen to be undervalued in the Netherlands (e.g. older rixdollars still valued at 50 stuivers currency), Dutch trade coins like lion dollars, rixdollars and silver ducats were exported and became staple currency for the rest of Europe until the end of the 18th century. The
Royal Dutch Mint still mints the famed silver ducat to this day. A silver 1-gulden denomination weighing 10.61 g, 0.91 fine, was minted by the
States of Holland and West Friesland in 1680. The gulden design featured
Pallas Athena standing, holding a spear topped by a hat in her right hand, resting with her left forearm on Gospels set on an ornate basis, with a small shield in the legend.
19th century: United Netherlands Following the collapse of the
Bank of Amsterdam in the aftermath of the
Napoleonic Wars, in 1817 the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands redefined the Gulden as either 9.613 g silver or 0.60561 g gold. It was decimally divided into 100 cents, and the 1-gulden coin was permanently issued. This standard was doomed to fail due to • the existence in the former
Austrian Netherlands of silver
kronenthalers of 25.71 g fine silver valued at 2.7 gulden (hence, only 9.52 g per gulden), and • the gulden's gold equivalent of 0.60561 g, at a gold–silver ratio of 15.5 in neighboring France, being worth only 9.39 g in silver. Following Belgium's secession from the Netherlands in 1830, a more permanent solution was implemented in 1840 by reducing the gulden to 9.45 g fine silver and repealing its fixed equivalence in gold.
Gold standard As a result of the adoption of the
gold standard by the newly established
German Empire in 1873, the Netherlands in 1875 repealed the free coinage of silver into gulden coins, substituted by the free coinage of gold into 10-gulden coins containing 6.048 g fine gold. This arrangement continued until the worldwide suspension of the gold standard in 1914 due to the
First World War. The gold standard was revived in 1925 but was abandoned in 1936.
After 1914 In 1914, the guilder was traded at a rate of 2.46 guilders = 1
U.S. dollar. As of 1938, the rate was 1.82 guilders = 1
U.S. dollar. One Dutch guilder in 1914 could buy roughly the same amount of goods and services as US$10.02 or €8.17 in December 2017. In 1938, the guilder purchasing power would be approximately equal to US$9.54 or €7.78 in December 2017. Overall, the guilder remained a very stable currency and was also the third highest-valued currency unit in Europe in the
interwar period (after the British
pound sterling and the
Irish pound, which, at this time, were pegged to each other at par). Following the
German occupation, on 10 May 1940, the guilder was pegged to the
Reichsmark at a rate of 1 guilder = 1.5 Reichsmark. This rate was reduced to 1.327 on 17 July of the same year. The liberating Allied forces set an exchange rate of 2.652 guilders = 1
U.S. dollar, which became the peg for the guilder within the
Bretton Woods system. In 1949, the peg was changed to 3.8 guilders = 1 dollar, approximately matching the devaluation of the
British pound. In 1961, the guilder was revalued to 3.62 guilders = 1 dollar, a change approximately in line with that of the
German mark. After 1967 guilders were made from
nickel instead of silver.
Euro changeover In 2002, the guilder was replaced by the
euro at an exchange rate of 2.20371 guilders = €1. Coins remained exchangeable for euros at branches of the
Netherlands Central Bank until 1 January 2007. Most guilder banknotes that were valid at the time of conversion can be exchanged until the deadline of 1 January 2032. There are some exceptions to this, and furthermore no banknote received as payment for commercial goods or services after 27 January 2002 is exchangeable. See
Banknotes of the Dutch guilder for a full list of guilder banknotes and their last valid exchange date. ==Coins==