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Somali shilling: SOS Sh.So. Somalia: South African rand: ZAR R South Africa: South Sudanese pound: SSP £ South Sudan: Sudanese pound: SDG LS or ج.س Sudan: Swazi lilangeni: SZL L (singular) E (plural) Eswatini: Tanzanian shilling: TZS TSh Tanzania: Tunisian dinar: TND DT (Latin) د.ت (Tunisian Arabic) Tunisia: Ugandan shilling: UGX USh ...
Ratio: 1 (2nd) pound = 100 dinars: Currency of Sudan January 2007 – 2011 Succeeded by: Third Sudanese pound Location: (North) Sudan Reason: independence of South Sudan Ratio: at par Note: same ISO code with second pound: Preceded by: 1st Sudanese pound Location: Southern Sudan Reason: currency unification (peace treaty) Ratio: 1 (2nd) pound ...
It was introduced on 18 July 2011, and replaced the Sudanese pound at par. [5] On 1 September 2011, the Sudanese pound ceased to be legal tender in South Sudan. On October 8, 2020, due to rapid depreciation of the South Sudanese pound's exchange rate with the United States dollar, South Sudan announced that it would soon change its currency. [6 ...
In 1992, the Sudanese Pound replaced the dinar as Sudan's currency. Until a referendum, South Sudan will become to first to use the new currency and will be nicknamed 'the Sudani'. [29] Inaugural Finance Minister David Deng Athorbie announced the creation of the South Sudanese pound to go into effect a week after independence. [30]
A convention frequently used in retail pricing was to list prices over one pound all in shillings, rather than in pounds and shillings; for example, £4-18-0 would be written as 98/– (£4.90 in decimal currency). This is still seen in shilling categories of Scottish beer, such as 90/– beer.
Sudanese pound: SDG Sudan: ... Somali shilling: SOS ... Toggle the table of contents. List of currencies in the Arab World. 1 language ...
The dinar replaced the first Sudanese pound (SDP) on June 8, 1992, at a rate of SD 1 = £S.10. On January 10, 2007, a second Sudanese pound (SDG) was introduced at a rate of 1 pound = 100 dinars. According to the Bank of Sudan , the dinar was to have stopped circulating after a six-month transitional period.
On 1 October 1951, the Indian rupee was replaced in Aden by the East African shilling, with twenty shillings being equal in value to one pound sterling. The East African shilling had itself been created in 1922 as a monetary unit out of the Indian rupee when the rising price of silver in the wake of the First World War caused the Indian rupees ...