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Iranian rial. The rial (Persian: ریال ایران, romanized:riyâl-è Irân; sign: ﷼ ; abbreviation: Rl (singular) and Rls (plural) [ 15 ][ 16 ] or IR[ 17 ] in Latin; ISO code: IRR) is the official currency of Iran. It is subdivided into 100 dinars, but due to the rial's low purchasing power the dinar is not practically used.
U.S. dollar, the official currency of the United States, the world's dominant reserve currency and the most traded currency globally. Euro, the currency used by the most of countries and territories, the second-largest reserve currency and the second-most traded currency. Some currencies, such as the Abkhazian apsar, are not used in day-to-day ...
shiraz.ir. Shiraz (Persian: شیراز; / ʃɪəˈrɑːz / ⓘ; [ʃiːˈɾɒːz] ⓘ) [ a ] is the fifth-most-populous city of Iran [ b ] and the capital of Fars Province, [ 4 ] which has been historically known as Pars (پارس, Pārs) and Persis. [ 5 ] As of the 2016 national census, the population of the city was 1,565,572 people, and its ...
From country to country, monetary units vary nearly as much as the cultures that use them. But have you ever wondered why a dollar is called a 'dollar'? How the world's currencies got their names
Tunisia. د.ت (Tunisian Arabic) or DT (Latin) UAE dirham [8] AED. United Arab Emirates. AED [9] Moroccan dirham. MAD. Morocco.
A currency[a] is a standardization of money in any form, in use or circulation as a medium of exchange, for example banknotes and coins. [1][2] A more general definition is that a currency is a system of money in common use within a specific environment over time, especially for people in a nation state. [3] Under this definition, the British ...
Shiraz is founded in Pars Province, a central area for Persian civilisation. The earliest reference to Shiraz is on Elamite clay tablets dated to 2000 BC, found in June 1970 during digging for the construction of a brick kiln in the southwest corner of the city. The tablets, written in ancient Elamite, name a city called Tiraziš. [1]
Issuance. Central bank. Iran. The Iranian toman (Persian: تومان, romanized: tūmân, pronounced [tuː.mɒːn]; from Turko-Mongolian tümen "unit of ten thousand", [1][2][a] see the unit called tumen) is a superunit of the official currency of Iran, the rial. One toman is equivalent to 10 (old), or 10,000 (new, official) rials.