No one, the Icelandic coins all have a picture of fish on the front and the coat-of-arms on the back. Three of the four paper bills do however have pictures of persons. (See www.sedlabanki.is)
In Iceland the currency is krona.
Krona
It's not a place. "Ein krona island" is what's on Icelandic coins. "Island" is Icelandic for "Iceland" so "island krona" means "Iceland crown".
Krona is in Iceland, sweden, denmark and faroe island have danich krona :D
The Icelandic Króna, basically meaning crown.What "form" you ask, it is mostly electronic, or used in paper bills and thick metal coins called klink in Iceland.. I think it's because the sound it makes. "Klink".
Krone - Denmark, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Norway.
"Island" is the Icelandic name for "Iceland". "Aurar" is the plural of "eyrir", which is 1/100 of a Krona (plural - "kronur"), the currency unit in Iceland.
The ISK is a currency that is used in Iceland. ISK stands for the Icelandic Krona. The word Krona refers to Crown in the local language. The highest denomination is 50ISK.
Nope. You can buy a chocolate bar for 120 kr. here in Iceland.
Last I heard, it was illegal to take Icelandic currency in or out of Iceland.
Currently, 5 US dollars are worth 594.50 Icelandic Krona
Aurar is the plural of eyrir, an Icelandic monetary unit worth one hundredth of a krona. Icelandic for Iceland is Island. So a coin that says 'Island 20 aurar' is an Icelandic fifth of a krona.