The first banknotes of the third Czechoslovak koruna were issued by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia in denominations of 1, 3 and 5 korun (state notes) and by the State Bank in denominations of 10, 25, 50 and 100 korun (banknotes).
From 1958, new 25, 10, 100 and finally 50 KÃÂs banknotes were designed, and the state notes were gradually replaced by coins during the 1960s. The 20 KÃÂs banknote was printed from 1970 to replace the 25 KÃÂs note. The 500 KÃÂs banknote appeared in 1973. Starting with the 1000 KÃÂs banknote in 1985, a new, more uniform series (designer: AlbÃÂn Brunovský) was issued adding a new denomination each year. This process was interrupted by the fall of the communism (and finally by the dissolution of the country) : the new 100 KÃÂs note issued in 1989 depicted Klement Gottwald, a prominent communist, and was quickly withdrawn after the Velvet Revolution. A new 500 KÃÂs banknote was meant to be released by 1990 but had stopped in April of 1990 after the end of communism in Czechoslovakia.