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The dinar (Serbian: динар, pronounced; paucal: dinara / динара; abbreviation: DIN and дин ; code: RSD) is the currency of Serbia. The dinar was first used in Serbia in medieval times, its earliest use dating back to 1214. The dinar was reintroduced as the official Serbian currency by Prince Mihailo in
There were three distinct dinars. The first was introduced in 20 July 1992 [1] in parallel with the new Yugoslav dinar of that year, to which it was equal. The second dinar replaced the first at a rate of 1 million to one on 1 October 1993, whilst the third replaced the second at a rate of 1 billion (10 9) to one on 1 January 1994.
The Socialist Party of Serbia, which was the dominant political force in Serbia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia between 1990 and 2000, lost its hold on power after the defeat of party leader Slobodan Milošević in the 2000 Yugoslavian presidential election and his subsequent downfall in the 5 October Revolution. The party entered an ...
Republika Srpska (Serbian Cyrillic: Република Српска, pronounced [repǔblika sr̩̂pskaː] ⓘ, also referred to as the Republic of Srpska) is one of the two entities within Bosnia and Herzegovina, the other being the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Situated in the northern and eastern regions of the country, it recorded a ...
ISO 4217 code is used for national currency, in this case the Serbian dinar. This three-letter code is composed of, by rule, first two letters of the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 and a third letter is initial of the currency itself: RSD. Exceptions from the rule are made only in the third letter, if that suits the country better, that is however not the ...
2000 in Serbia (6 C, 4 P) 2001 in Serbia (6 C, ... 2000s in Serbian sport (11 C, 1 P) T. ... International sanctions against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
The first Serbian dinars, like many other Southern European coins, replicated Venetian grosso, including characters in Latin (the word dux replaced with the word rex). [2] For many years it was one of the main export articles of medieval Serbia, considering the relative abundance of silver coming from Serbian mines.
SAO Krajina and later the Republic of Serbian Krajina sought to become "a constitutive part of the unified state territory of the Republic of Serbia". [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The Republika Srpska 's political leader Radovan Karadžić declared that he did not want it to be in a federation alongside Serbia in Yugoslavia, but that Srpska should be directly ...