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The 10 baht is a perfect copy of the 500 lire coin even in its alloy, being made of acmonital for the outer ring and bronzital for the centre plug, but slightly larger (26 mm to 25.80 mm) and heavier (8.5 g to 6.8 g).
Banknote Series 12 was The Great Series in denominations of 10 baht notes in 1980 until the termination of 10 baht banknote issuing after 1995 to be replaced by 10 baht coins which has been issued since 1988, 20 baht notes in 1981 and 100 baht notes in 1978 with engravings of monuments for those monarchs entitled "The Great". [18]"
The two-baht coin, confusingly similar in color and size to the one-baht coin, was changed from nickel-clad low-carbon steel to aluminium bronze. New two-baht coin was the first of the new series released on 3 February 2009, followed by the satang coins in April, a five-baht coin in May, a ten-baht coin in June, and a one-baht coin in July 2009.
The one baht note was replaced by a coin in 1957 and the five baht was replaced in 1972. 50 baht notes were again reintroduced in 1985, with the 10 baht note replaced by a coin in 1988. The EURion constellation has been used on the reverse of 100 and 1000 baht notes since 2003.
10 Francs 1988 France: 10 francs 1988 Monaco: 10 baht 1988 Thailand: 100 Pesos 1989 Mexico: 1,000 Pesos 1989 Mexico: 50 Yuan 1990 China: 5 Lei 1991 Moldova: 10 Lei 1991 Moldova: 200 Escudos 1991 Portugal: 10 Dinar 1991 France: 25 Yuan 1992 China: 10 Dinar 1992 Algeria: 20 Dinar 1992 Algeria: 50 Dinar 1992 Algeria: 50 Gapik 1992 Azerbaijan: 250 ...
France, with a 10-francs coin in 1988; Monaco, with a 10 francs in 1988, Thailand, with a 10 baht, in 1988; Mexico with the 100 and 1000 Pesos in 1989; Monaco with the 10 Francs in 1989; China with the 50 Yuan in 1990, 25 Yuan coin in 1992, a 10 Yuan coin in 1994, and a 500 Yuan coin in 1995; Moldova with the 5 and 10 Lei in 1991, Portugal in ...
Bullet money or bullet coins, known in Thai as photduang (Thai: พดด้วง; pronounced [pʰót.dûaŋ], also spelled pod duang, etc.), were a type of coinage historically used in Siam (now Thailand) and its predecessor kingdoms. They were almost exclusively made of silver, in the form of a bar bent into a roundish shape, and stamped ...
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