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First Leu Coins – 1872-1873 Series Image Value Technical parameters Description Date of Diameter Mass Composition Edge Obverse Reverse first minting withdrawal lapse 50 bani 18 mm 2.5 g Crown above date within wreath Value above sprays 1873 1 leu 23 mm 5 g silver Value, wreath, year of minting CAROL I DOMNUL ROMANIEI ("Carol I, Lord of ...
Description: Romanian coin: 1 leu 1947: Date: 1 June 2013: Source: Own work: Author: scan by Bogdan Giușcă; coin by National Bank of Romania: Permission (Reusing this file)PD
The ten-bani coin is a coin of the Romanian leu.It was reintroduced on 1 July 2005 and is the second-largest denomination coin in Romania. In addition to Romania, it has been minted in the United Kingdom (1867), Belgium (1900, 1905-1906), Germany (1906) and Russia (1952).
Description: Romanian coin: 250 lei 1941: Date: 7 August 2013: Source: Own work: Author: scan by Bogdan Giușcă; coin by National Bank of Romania: Permission
The one leu coin was a coin of the Romanian leu. Introduced in 1870, it last circulated between 1992 and de facto 1996, when it was the lowest-denomination coin in the country. It was considered as circulating coin for accounting reasons and was still minted in proof sets until the 2005 denomination of the currency.
Therefore this image is assumed to be in the public domain worldwide, although some of the above categories may be subject to usage restrictions within Romania. العربية | Deutsch | English | français | italiano | македонски | română | русский | sicilianu | +/−
The five hundred lei banknote is the highest of the circulating denomination of the Romanian leu. It is the same size as the 200 Euro banknote. The main color of the banknote is gray. It pictures, on the obverse poet Mihai Eminescu, and on the reverse the University of Iași Library, and the front page of the Timpul newspaper.
These coins bear a lion on them (hence Dutch leeuwendaalder, German löwenthaler) and the name of the coin became abbreviated known as leu (plural lei), which is still the name of the Romanian and Moldovan currencies. The Ottomans minted coins imitating the Dutch silver daalders and these coins were known as piaștri, Piastre.