Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A proposal has been agreed to by the Iranian Parliament to drop one zero at the end of number, by replacing the rial with a new currency called the toman, the name of a previous Iranian currency, at the rate of 1 toman = 10,000 rials. [19] As of 2024, the Iranian rial is the world’s least valuable currency, worth less than the Sierra Leonean ...
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.
1 INR = 1.6000 NPR (buy) 1 INR = 1.6015 NPR (sell) North Korea: North Korean won: Central Bank of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Oman: Omani rial: Central Bank of Oman: 1 OMR = USD 2.6008 Pakistan: Pakistani rupee: State Bank of Pakistan Papua New Guinea: Papua New Guinean kina: Bank of Papua New Guinea Philippines: Philippine peso
The Iranian rial hit a record low against the U.S. dollar on the unofficial market on Monday amid a deterioration in the economic situation and the reimposition of sanctions by the United States.
From the establishment of the Imperial Bank of Iran (during the era of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar), the first series of Iranian banknotes commissioned by the bank in 1269 in England and by the printing house Bradbury Wilkinson and Company in numbers 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 20, 25, 50, 100, 500 and 1000 Tomans. All the bills, except for the thousand toman ...
The visit comes after Iran's airstrike into Israel, which was in response to an Israeli strike in Syria that had killed two Iranian generals in a consular building. Pakistan is among the countries ...
The one hundred thousand rial banknote is a denomination of Iranian currency that was issued in 2010, replacing the 50,000 rial note as the largest denomination. [ 1 ] The bill features Rouhollah Khomeini 's portrait on the front and the Tomb of Saadi on the back.
Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi and Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed on Monday to boost trade between the neighbouring nations to $10 billion a year, as Raisi commenced a three-day ...