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Maldivian rufiyaa

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Contemporary Maldivian coins and notes
Unit (MVR) Design on Obverse Design on Reverse
Coins
0.01 Denomination Value Coconut Palm
0.05 Denomination Value Tuna
0.10 Denomination Value Sailing Boat (Odi)
0.25 Denomination Value Friday Mosque & Minaret
0.50 Denomination Value Turtle
1 Denomination Value Coat of Arms
2 Denomination Value Conch shell (charonia tritonis)
Paper money
5 Coconut palm, Dhoani Traditional Fishing
10 Coconut palm, Dhoani Traditional Island Life
20 Coconut palm, Dhoani Inner Harbour (Historical)
50 Coconut palm, Dhoani Malé Bazaar (Historical)
100 Coconut palm, Dhoani Medhuziyaaraiy (Monument)
500 Coconut palm, Dhoani Islamic Centre and Mosque

Image:100rufiya.jpg The Maldivian rufiyaa (Dhivehi: ދިވެހި ރުފިޔާ) is the currency of the Maldives. The issuance of the currency is controlled by the Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA). The most commonly used symbols for the rufiyaa are MRF and Rf. The ISO 4217 code for Maldivian rufiyaa is MVR. One rufiyaa is equal to 100 laari. The etymology of the word rufiyaa comes from the Hindi word rupayā, from Sanskrit rupya (wrought silver). The official exchange rate is USD1 to 12.85 MVR.

Contents

History

The earliest form of currency used in the Maldives was cowry shells (Cypraea moneta) and historical accounts of travelers indicate that they were traded in this manner even during the 13th Century. Ibn Batuta (1344 A.D.) observed that more than 40 ships loaded with cowry shells were exported each year. A single gold Dinar was worth 400,000 shells.

A few centuries later, during the 1600s and 1700s silver wires (folded in the middle to make two parallel straps) with engraved Persian and Arabic inscriptions were imported and traded as currency. This form of currency was used in the Persian Gulf, India, Ceylon and the Far East during the time. Historians agree that this new form of currency was most probably exchanged for cowry shells and indicates Maldives’ lucrative trade with these countries. The first Sultan to imprint his own seal onto this currency was Ghaazee Mohamed Thakurufaanu Al Auzam. The seal was much broader than the wires hence it was barely legible.

The first known batch of coin currency was introduced by Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar (1648-1687 AD). Compared to the previous forms of money used, his coins were much neater and made out of pure silver thus possessing a higher standard of quality. Surprisingly, this new money was forged in the capital city of Malé, a fact which it acknowledged on its reverse face. An engravement (Dhivehi: ކަނޑާއި އެއްގަމުގެ ރަސްގެފާނު، މަތިވެރި އިސްކަންދަރު , King of Land and Sea, Iskandhar the Great) is found milled on the edge.

After this period, gold coins replaced the existing silver ones during the reign of Sultan Hassan Nooruddin in 1787 AD. He used two different qualities of gold in his coins; one was called Mohoree and the other Baimohoree, of which the former is of higher value. How this gold was obtained is uncertain.

Through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, bronze coins were issued denominated in laari. Sultan Mohamed Imaadhudheen IV (1900-1904) introduced what historians believe to be the first machine struck coins, judging the superior quality of the engravements. His successor Sultan Mohamed Shamshudeen III (1904-1935) made the last of these coins, 1 and 4 laari denominations, which were struck in the United Kingdom by Heaton's Mint, Birmingham, England in 1913.

Image:1ruf.jpg

Following the end of coin production specifically for the Maldives, the Sultanate came to use the Ceylonese rupee. This was supplemented in 1947 by issues of banknotes denominated in rufiyaa, equal in value to the rupee. In 1960, coins denominated in laari, now worth one hundredth of the rufiyaa, were introduced. Sultan Mohamed Fareed I ordered these coins from the Royal Mint in England. Unlike his predecessors, Sultan Fareed did not embellish his title on the coins; instead he used the National Emblem on the reverse side with the traditional title of the state (Arabic: ا دولت امحلد يبيت, Republic of Maldives) and the denomination value on the obverse side. The new batch consisted of denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 25 and 50 laari. The currency was put into circulation in February 1961 and all the previously traded coins, with the exception of Shamshudeen III's 1 and 4 laari, were withdrawn from circulation on June 17, 1966.

The newly established central bank of the country, Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA), introduced the Rf 1 on January 22 1983. The coin was made from steel clad copper nickel and was made in West Germany.

Bank Notes

Image:500rf.JPG The first Maldivian bank note was produced in 1945 when the People's Majlis (Parliament) passed bill number 2/66 on "Maldivian Bank Note". Under this new law, notes for 50 laari, and 1, 2, 5 and 10 rufiyaa were issued and put into circulation in 1947.

The current range of bank notes were issued in 1983, and the denominations are 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 rufiyaa. A larger denomination of 500 rufiyaa was issued in 1990.

References

Primary Source

  • MMA (Dhivehi) Publication, 1983. ދިވެހި ރާއްޖޭގެ ފައިސާ (Maldivian Currency)

External links


Rupees

Indian rupee | Mauritian rupee | Nepalese rupee | Pakistani rupee | Seychelles rupee | Sri Lankan rupee | Indonesian rupiah | Maldivian rufiyaa

Formerly used rupees include: Burmese rupee | French Indian rupee | German East African rupie | Gulf rupee | Portuguese Indian rupia

History of the rupee


Currencies of Asia and the Pacific
Central Afghan afghani | Kazakhstani tenge | Kyrgyzstani som | Mongolian tugrug | Russian ruble | Tajikistani somoni | Turkmenistani manat | Uzbekistani som
East Chinese yuan | Hong Kong dollar | Japanese yen | Macanese pataca | North Korean won | South Korean won | New Taiwan dollar
South-East Brunei dollar | Cambodian riel | Indonesian rupiah | Lao kip | Malaysian ringgit | Myanmar kyat | Philippine peso | Singapore dollar | Thai baht | US Dollar (East Timor) | Vietnamese đồng
South Bangladeshi taka | Bhutanese ngultrum | Indian rupee | Maldivian rufiyaa | Nepalese rupee | Pakistani rupee | Sri Lankan rupee
West Armenian dram | Azerbaijani manat | Bahraini dinar | Egyptian pound | Georgian lari | Iranian rial | Iraqi dinar | Israeli new sheqel | Jordanian dinar | Kuwaiti dinar | Lebanese pound | Omani rial | Qatari riyal | Saudi riyal | Syrian pound | Turkish new lira | UAE dirham | Yemeni rial
Pacific Australian dollar (Kiribati, Nauru, Norfolk Island, Tuvalu) | CFP franc (French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and Futuna) | Fijian dollar | New Zealand dollar (Cook Islands, Niue, Tokelau, Pitcairn Islands) | Papua New Guinean kina | Samoan tala | Solomon Islands dollar | Tongan pa'anga | US dollar (American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau) | Vanuatu vatu
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