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Serbia Dinara Banknotes
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The information about Serbia.
Serbia is a landlocked country that lies in Southeast Europe. Serbia is a small country with about 34,116 square miles and an approximately 7 million population. Belgrade is the capital and also the largest city in Serbia. The official language of this country is Serbian. The Serbian Dinar is the current currency of Serbian.
The history of the Serbian Dinar.
The first Dinar was in circulation in 1214 under Stefan Nemanjic until the fall of Stephen Tomasevic in 1459. After that, a variety of currencies were in circulation in Serbia for centuries because of the Ottoman rules. Finally, after the retreatment of the Ottoman reign in 1867, the first Serbian Dinar coins were minted in 1868 by Prince Mihailo Obrenovic’s order. He wanted the country to have its national currency. About 8 years later, the first banknote in Serbia was introduced. Suffered many arduous, however, the Serbian Dinar (RSD) is stillness as Serbia’s national currency.
The first Serbian Dinar banknote series was available at 1, 5, 10, 50, and 100 dinars. However, after World War I, it was replaced by the Yugoslav Dinar in 1920. The Serbian Dinar had been replaced in 1941 but still was replaced by the Yugoslav Dinar in 1944 because of the reconstitution of Yugoslavia.
The second Serbian Dinar banknote series was introduced involving 10, 20, 50, 100, 500, and 1 000 dinar notes.
Finally, the Yugoslav Dinar was completely replaced in 2003 when Montenegro declared its independence and Serbia Dinar certainly became the official currency of Serbia. The third banknote series was introduced in 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1 000, 2 000, 5 000 dinar notes. The features were decorated as a portrait of a person who used to dedicate their achievements to Serbian history on the facade. It was featured with their accomplishments such as Nikola Tesla and his electromagnetic induction machine on the 100 dinar banknotes on the reversed side.
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