The Yugoslavian dinar is obsolete, at the time they were printing them it was a time of high inflation and the note you got one day would be worth nothing the next.
I bought one for 50 cent Euro from a Gypsy while overseas in Kosovo for a keepsake (It looks cool) and my interpreter told me it wasn't worth a penny....
Currently, 100,000 Kune = 18,564.60 US Dollars
Croatian no longer uses the Dinar. They now use the Kuna and will soon use the Euro. Today (31, January 2013):
1 USD = .18 HRK (Croatian Kuna)
As of June 11th, 2014: 1 US Dollar equals 5.60 Croatian Kuna 1 Croatian Kuna equals 0.18 US Dollar
Croatian kuna was created in 1994.
Thursday, August 13, 2009 1 Euro = 7.33963 Croatian Kuna
1 HRK (Croatian kuna) = 0.1920 USD
100 lipa = 1 Kuna. 1 Kuna = 0,13 Euro
Croatian currency is Kuna (HRK)
The Croatian Kuna.
Croatian Kuna
Croatian money is called Kuna.
From how I understand it, 100000 hrvatskih dinara is not worth anything anymore except to a collector. It was Croatian currency back in the 90's and 80's, but the inflation was too ridiculous so they dropped it and replaced it with the Croation Kuna.
Zagreb is capital of Croatia and money (currency) is HRK (Croatian kuna) or commonly KN (kuna)
In the Middle Ages, marten skins (kuna = marten) were substitute for money in Croatia. As real money, the Croatian kuna was introduced in the Independent State of Croatia on 26 July 1941, as replacement for Yugoslav dinar. The kuna was withdrawn from circulation from 30 June to 9 July, 1945 and replaced by the Yugoslav dinar. Croatian political emigrants issued propaganda money named Kuna since 1934 till 1989. The modern kuna was introduced on 30 May 1994, after a transitional period during which the Yugoslav dinar was replaced with the Croatian dinar.