Dinar
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For the place in Afghanistan, see Dinar, Afghanistan.
The Dinar is the name of the official currency in several countries. The word dinar (Arabic: دينار, Serbian: динар, Macedonian: денар) is derived from denarius, a Roman currency.
Contents |
[edit] Legal tender
[edit] Countries currently using the dinar
1 Kuwaiti dinar note printed 1994.
| Countries | Currency | ISO 4217 code |
|---|---|---|
| Algerian dinar | DZD | |
| Bahraini dinar | BHD | |
| Jordanian dinar | JOD | |
| Kuwaiti dinar | KWD | |
| Libyan dinar | LYD | |
| Macedonian denar | MKD | |
| Serbian dinar | RSD | |
| Tunisian dinar | TND | |
| Iraqi dinar | IQD |
[edit] Countries which have previously used the dinar
- Abu Dhabi: the Abu Dhabi dinar or Bahraini dinar which have been used from 1966 to 1973
- Bosnia and Herzegovina: the Bosnia and Herzegovina dinar
- Croatia: the Croatian dinar
- Iran: the Iranian rial was divided into 100 dinars
- Republic of Serbian Krajina: the Krajina dinar
- Republika Srpska: the Republika Srpska dinar
- South Yemen: the South Yemeni dinar
- Sudan: the Sudanese dinar
- Yugoslavia: the Yugoslav dinar
[edit] See also
- Macedonian denar
- Yugoslav dinar
- Gold Dinar
- Economy of the OIC
- Dinar District, Afyonkarahisar, Turkey
- Dinar Líneas Aéreas, the Argentine airline that operated between 1992 and 2002|:es:Dinar Líneas Aéreas
- The MIC Dinar is a Sudanese, license-produced variant of the HK G3 rifle.
[edit] Extra Link
- Denarius - Roman Empire currency
- Dollar
- Pound (currency)
- Source for Iraqi Dinar
[edit] References
- Krause, Chester L. and Clifford Mishler (2003). 2004 Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1901-Present, Colin R. Bruce II (senior editor), 31st ed., Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87349-593-4.
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