Features

The "Danish Money Exchange"  Joke!  (April Fool's Day - 1980)

The "Danish Money Exchange" Joke - (April Fool's Day - 1980) 

The Danish Money Exchange case was a clever prank that played on the tradition of April Fool's Day, celebrated with humorous hoaxes and tricks, making this currency story even more amusing and culturally relevant for readers interested in playful history.

 

 

 

One leg or 

two legs?

On March 11, 1980, the National Bank of Denmark issued a 20-kroner banknote featuring a picture of two house sparrows. Curiously, one of the sparrows appeared to be one-legged. This inspired the Roskilde Tidende newspaper to run a story that year announcing that all bills with one-legged birds were fake, but that they could be exchanged at the post office for genuine bills depicting two-legged birds.

 

Lines at post offices soon became so long, with people eager to exchange their fake bills, that post office employees had to put notices on the doors explaining that no currency exchange was taking place. This amusing scene showed how much people enjoyed the prank.

 

The hoax was the brainchild of artist/cartoonist Jan Robert Thoresen. He was subsequently questioned by the police, but let go without any charges being filed since there was no law against improving the country's currency. Nor was it plausible that any government would ever allow people to swap counterfeit banknotes for genuine ones. His cleverness made the story memorable and harmless.

Denmark, 20 Kroner, series 1972 UNC, known as “Sparrows Banknotes”.

NESM Collection

Happy April Fool's Day!

Festivity Features of Banknotes and Bonds. 

Giving you interesting stories in history.

Information icon

We need your consent to load the translations

We use a third-party service to translate the website content that may collect data about your activity. Please review the details in the privacy policy and accept the service to view the translations.