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Indian rupee ₹ INR Paisa: 100 Indonesia: Indonesian rupiah: Rp IDR Sen: 100 Iran: Iranian rial: Rl or Rls (pl.) IRR Rial: 100 Iraq: Iraqi dinar: ID IQD Fils: 1000 Ireland: Euro € EUR Cent: 100 Isle of Man: Manx pound £ (none) Penny: 100 Sterling £ GBP Penny: 100 Israel: Israeli new shekel ₪ ILS Agora: 100 Italy: Euro € EUR Cent: 100 ...
In 1991, a new coin series with post-communist iconography and new valuations was released in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 lei. These coins gradually lost value with inflation, and a new series was introduced in 1998 with an aluminum-magnesium alloy 500 leu and 1,000 and 5,000 leu coins in 2000.
1 leu 16 mm 1.83 g nickel-brass value, year of minting oil well, rising sun 1948 30 January 1952 1 February 1952 0.61 g aluminium 2 lei 18 mm 2.44 g nickel-brass corn cob 0.84 g aluminium 5 lei 23 mm 3.5 g bronze olive wreath, value, year of minting coat of arms, "REPUBLICA POPULARA ROMANA" 20 lei 26 mm 1.5 g aluminium
The one hundred thousand lei was the largest-denomination coin ever issued in Romania. It was minted only in 1946, to mark the end of World War II the previous year. 100.000 lei coin from 1946. It was made of 70% silver and 30% copper.
1 ⁄ 1000 or 1 ⁄ 100 of various ... Romanian leu; Moldovan leu; Leu is the singular and Lei is the plural. ... Centesimal division of the Indian rupee. Before 2010 ...
1 July 2005 Coat of arms of Romania (2016–present) 2018–present 1 January 2018 5 L: 127 × 67 mm €10: Violet Coat of arms of Romania (1992–2016) George Enescu, Carnation: Romanian Athenaeum: 2005–2017 1 July 2005 Coat of arms of Romania (2016–present) 2018–present 1 January 2018 10 L: 133 × 72 mm €20: Intaglio: Pink and light red
Through the Organic Regulations adopted in 1831 in Wallachia and in 1832 in Moldova stabilized the coinage used in the Romanian Lands: the Austrian florin and a silver coin known to numismatists as the Zwainziger from Zwanziger, "twentieth", the Tyrolian kreuzer, worth 20 Veronese denarii (in German Berner, in Latin denarii cruciati, cruciati meaning "crossed", from the cross on the coin).
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).