- News
- Sport
- Politics
- Sci/Tech
- Showbiz
- Health
- Business
- Art
- Fashion
- Education
- Weather
- Automotive
- Aviation
- Religious
- Crime
Burmese rupee
The rupee was the currency of Burma (now Myanmar) between 1852 and 1952, except for the years 1943???1945. History When Burma was conquered by the British, the Indian rupee replaced the kyat at par. From 1897, the government of India issued notes in Rangoon of the same general type as were issued in India but featuring languages used in Burma rather than those of India. In 1917 and again from 1927, Indian notes were overprinted for use in Burma. When Burma became a separate colony in 1937, a separate issue of paper money was made for use only in Burma but no separate coinage was issued. When the Japanese invaded Burma in 1942, they introduced a new currency: the rupee, divided into 100 cents. This currency was only issued in paper form. The rupee was replaced by the kyat in 1943. In 1945, the Japanese occupation currency was declared worthless and Burma reverted to using Indian coinage and its own rupee paper money, with the...
e: 2000000000000062348
Strings (9)
-
str_html_meta_format_detection
str.html:meta.format-detectiontelephone=no -
str_html_meta_generator
str.html:meta.generatorMediaWiki 1.44.0-wmf.8 -
str_html_meta_og_title
str.html:meta.og:titleBurmese rupee - Wikipedia -
str_html_meta_og_type
str.html:meta.og:typewebsite -
str_html_meta_referrer
str.html:meta.referrerorigin -
str_html_meta_robots
str.html:meta.robotsmax-image-preview:standard -
str_html_meta_viewport
str.html:meta.viewportwidth=1120 -
str_k__rdfs_comment
str.rdfs:commentThe rupee was the currency of Burma (now Myanmar) between 1852 and 1952, except for the years 1943???1945. History When Burma was conquered by the British, the Indian rupee replaced the kyat at par. From 1897, the government of India issued notes in Rangoon of the same general type as were issued in India but featuring languages used in Burma rather than those of India. In 1917 and again from 1927, Indian notes were overprinted for use in Burma. When Burma became a separate colony in 1937, a separate issue of paper money was made for use only in Burma but no separate coinage was issued. When the Japanese invaded Burma in 1942, they introduced a new currency: the rupee, divided into 100 cents. This currency was only issued in paper form. The rupee was replaced by the kyat in 1943. In 1945, the Japanese occupation currency was declared worthless and Burma reverted to using Indian coinage and its own rupee paper money, with the... -
str_k__rdfs_label
str.rdfs:labelBurmese rupee