enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 50 euro note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/50_euro_note

    The fifty euro note (€50) is one of the middle value euro banknotes and has been used since the introduction of the euro (in its cash form) in 2002. [6] The note is used in the 25 countries (and Kosovo ) that have it as their sole currency (with 24 legally adopting it), which countries have a total population of about 350 million currently. [ 7 ]

  3. Euro banknotes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro_banknotes

    The euro was established in 1999, but "for the first three years it was an invisible currency, used for accounting purposes only, e.g. in electronic payments". [2] In 2002, notes and coins began to circulate. The euro rapidly took over from the former national currencies and slowly expanded around the European Union.

  4. Lira - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lira

    The Venetian lira was one of the currencies in use in Italy and due to the economic power of the Venetian Republic a popular currency in the Eastern Mediterranean trade. During the 19th century, the Ottoman Empire and the Eyalet of Egypt adopted the lira as their national currency, equivalent to 100 piasters or kuruş. When the Ottoman Empire ...

  5. Euro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euro

    The name euro was officially adopted on 16 December 1995 in Madrid. [16] The euro was introduced to world financial markets as an accounting currency on 1 January 1999, replacing the former European Currency Unit (ECU) at a ratio of 1:1 (US$1.1743 at the time). Physical euro coins and banknotes entered into circulation on 1 January 2002, making ...

  6. Currencies of the European Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currencies_of_the_European...

    The euro is the result of the European Union's project for economic and monetary union that came fully into being on 1 January 2002 and it is now the currency used by the majority of the European Union's member states, with all but Denmark (which has an opt-out in the EU treaties) bound to adopt it.

  7. Piastre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piastre

    The piastre or piaster (English: / p i ˈ æ s t ər /) is any of a number of units of currency. The term originates from the Italian for "thin metal plate". The name was applied to Spanish and Hispanic American pieces of eight, or pesos, by Venetian traders in the Levant in the 16th century. İmage of 50 Turkish piastres (Turkish:50 kuruş).

  8. Livre tournois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livre_tournois

    In France, the livre was worth 240 deniers (the "Tours penny"). These deniers were first minted by the abbey of Saint Martin, in the province of Touraine.Soon after Philip II of France seized the counties of Anjou and Touraine in 1203 and standardized the use of the livre tournois there, the livre tournois began to supersede the livre parisis (Paris pound) which had been up to that point the ...

  9. Fifty lei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifty_lei

    The fifty-lei banknote is one of the circulating denomination of the Romanian leu.It is the same size as the 50 Euro banknote.. The main color of the banknote is yellow. It pictures, on the obverse, pilot and engineer Aurel Vlaicu, and on the reverse the A Vlaicu Nr.