The dinar was the currency of the Republika Srpska between 1992 and 1998. There were four distinct currencies. The first was introduced in 1992 in conjunction with the new Yugoslav dinar of that year, to which it was equal. The second was introduced in October 1993 at a rate of one million to one. The third, introduced in January 1994, was worth one milliard (109) of the second dinara. Very soon after, the novi dinar was introduced which was pegged to the Deutsche Mark rather than replacing the earlier currency at a fixed rate. This circulated until 1998, when the Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark replaced it. Official language Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian Official script Cyrillic alphabet, Latin alphabet Capital de jure Sarajevo de facto Banja Luka Area â Total â % water 24,811 km² n/a Population â Total (2005) â Density 1,411,000 60/km² Ethnic groups (2005 est. ... Obverse of 10 Yugoslav Dinars issued by the National Bank of Yugoslavia during 1960s Reverse of 10 Yugoslav Dinars issued by the National Bank of Yugoslavia during 1960s Yugoslav dinar was the official valute in former Yugoslavia. ... The Deutsche Mark (DEM, DM) or German mark was the official currency of West and, from 1990 onwards, unified Germany. ... A 50,00 konvertibilnih marka (Federation of BiH) banknote A 0,50 KM (Republika Srpska) banknote A 500,00 Dinar (Republic of Bosnia Hercegovina) banknote The Convertible Mark (Bosnian and Croatian: konvertibilna marka, Serbian: конвеÑÑибилна маÑка), (ISO 4217:BAM) is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. ...