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AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD EUR JPY USD: From XE.com: ... Indian rupee, Sterling, Mauritian dollar Ratio: both rupees = MU$0.5 or Rs. 10/25 = £1 stg ...
Sterling £ GBP Penny: 100 ... Mauritius: Mauritian rupee: Re or Rs (pl.) MUR Cent: 100 Mexico: Mexican peso $ MXN Centavo: 100 Micronesia: United States dollar $ USD
Flemish pound – Burgundian Netherlands; French colonial pound – French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Martinique, Mauritius and Réunion; French pound – France; Gambian pound – The Gambia; Georgia pound – Georgia; Ghanaian pound – Ghana; Gibraltar pound – Gibraltar; Guadeloupe pound – Guadeloupe; Guernsey pound – Guernsey (not an ...
Malawian pound; Malian franc; Manilla (money) Marchuwa; Mauritanian ouguiya; Mauritian dollar; Mauritian rupee; Mombasan rupee; Moroccan dirham; Moroccan franc; Moroccan rial; Mosi-oa-Tunya (coin) Mozambican metica; Mozambican metical
The dollar circulated alongside sterling and the Indian rupee. An unofficial exchange rate of 2 rupees to the dollar was used, although this overvalued the rupee for a time. In 1877, the Mauritian rupee was introduced. It replaced the dollar at a rate of 2 rupees = 1 dollar.
On 7 May 1970, the Sultanate of Oman replaced the Gulf rupee with the Omani rial unit that was created at par with the pound sterling, so ending the existence of the Gulf rupee. Two years later, after the pound sterling was allowed to float on 23 June 1972, the Omani rial began to diverge from its sterling parity.
Indian rupee, pound sterling, Mauritian dollar Nepal Nepalese rupee: रू NPR Paisa = 1 ⁄ 100 rupee 133.80588 1932 Nepalese mohar Pakistan Pakistani rupee ₨ PKR Paisa = 1 ⁄ 100 rupee 277.97203 1947 Indian rupee (prior to partition) Seychelles Seychellois rupee: SR, SRe SCR Cent = 1 ⁄ 100 rupee 13.466389 1976 Mauritian rupee Sri Lanka ...
The UK government devalued the pound sterling in November 1967 from £1 = $2.80 to £1 = $2.40. This was not welcomed in many parts of the sterling area, and, unlike in the 1949 devaluation, many sterling area countries did not devalue their currencies at the same time. This was the beginning of the end for the sterling area.