The shilling was the currency issued for use in British controlled areas in East Africa from 1921 until 1969.. It was produced by the East African Currency Board. It is also the proposed name for a common currency that the East African Community plans to introduce by the end of 2009.
The British controlled areas of Arabia (known then as Aden, currently part of Yemen) began using the shilling in 1951, replacing the Indian rupee, the Maria Theresa Thaler, and other foreign currencies. In 1965, the East African Currency Board was breaking up, and the South Yemeni dinar was introduced at a rate of 20 shillings to 1 dinar.
The shilling was also used in parts of what is now Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea when they were under British control. Before 1941, these areas, then known as Italian East Africa were using the Italian East African lira. In 1941, as a result of World War II, Britain regained control and introduced the shilling, at a rate of 1 shilling to 24 lira. Italian Somaliland was returned to Italy in 1949 as a UN Trusteeship and soon switched to the Italian Somaliland somalo, which was at par with the shilling. British Somaliland gained independence in 1960, and joined what had been Italian Somaliland to create Somalia. Somalia used the Somali shilling which was at par with the East African shilling, with the East African shilling losing legal tender status in 1961. Ethiopia regained independence in 1941, with British support and began using the East African shilling. Maria Theresa Thalers, Indian rupees, and Egyptian pound were also legal tender at the beginning of this time, and it is unclear exactly when this status ended. Full sovereignty was restored in late 1944, and the Ethiopian birr was reintroduced in 1945 at a rate of 1 birr = 2 shillings. Eritrea was captured from the Italians in 1941, and began using the East African shilling, as well as the Egyptian pound, with the lira demonetized in 1942. When Eritrea formed a federation with Ethiopia in 1952, the birr, which was already in use in Ethiopia, was adopted in Eritrea.
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