(1918) On 22 December 1917, the
Central Rada established
Ukraine's state bank. The
karbovanets became first currency of the Ukrainian People's Republic. On 5 January 1918, the first official 100 karbovanets banknote was issued, signed by Mykhailo Kryvetskyi, the first director of the state bank. On 1 March 1918, the Central Council introduced a new currency, the hryvnia, consisting of 100
shahs and equaled to 1/2 of the previously issued karbovanets banknote. In April 1918,
Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky reintroduced the karbovanets as the main currency of Ukraine. It consisted of 200 shahs, and denominations of 10, 25, 50, 100, 250 and 1,000 karbovanets were issued. During the Nazi occupation of Ukraine in
World War II, the German occupying government (
Reichskommissariat Ukraine) issued banknotes denominated in karbovanets (
karbowanez in
German). The
third version of the karbovanets replaced rubles at par in 1992. The karbovanets was subject to
hyperinflation in the early 1990s following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. The karbovanets was replaced by the hryvnia in September 1996, at a rate of 1 hryvnia to 100,000 karbovanets. The introduction of the hryvnia was done in a covert fashion. It was introduced according to the
Presidential Decree of 26 August 1996, published three days later. During the transition period, 2–16 September, both hryvnias and karbovanets could be used, but change could only be given in hryvnias. All bank accounts were converted to hryvnias automatically. During the transition period, 97% of karbovanets were taken out of circulation, with 56% being removed in the first five days of the
currency reform. It was replaced by the
Russian ruble on 21 March 2014; Because of a lack of low-denomination Russian rubles in those
raions of the
Donbas under the control of the pro-Russian
separatist states of
Donetsk and
Luhansk, the hryvnia remained the predominant currency until 2022. ==Coinage==