Portal:Money/general images
Appearance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
General images - show another
The following are images from various currency-related articles on Wikipedia.
-
Image 1Banknotes of different currencies with a face value of 5000 (from Money)
-
Image 2Undated Kelzang tangka (1910), reverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 4Song Dynasty Jiaozi, the world's earliest paper money (from Money)
-
Image 5Tibetan "gaden" Tangka, undated (ca. AD 1840), reverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 6Tibetan "gaden" Tangka, undated (ca. AD 1840), obverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 7President J. K. Paasikivi illustrated in a former Finnish 10 mark banknote from 1980 (from Money)
-
Image 8Tibetan undated silver tangka, struck in 1953/54, reverse. (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 9Tibetan silver tangka with Ranjana (Lantsa) script, dated 15-28 (= AD 1894), obverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 11Tibetan kong par tangka, dated 13-45 (= AD 1791),obverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 12Tibetan undated silver tangka (2nd half of 18th century) with eight times the syllable "dza" in vartula script,reverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 13Sino Tibetan silver tangka, dated 58th year of Qian Long era, obverse. Weight 5.57 g. Diameter: 30 mm (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 14Paper money from different countries (from Money)
-
Image 16Money Base, M1 and M2 in the U.S. from 1981 to 2012 (from Money)
-
Image 18Banknotes and coins (from Money)
-
Image 20Tibetan undated silver tangka, struck in 1953/54, obverse. (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 21"Bent bar" minted under Achaemenid administration, Gandhara, c.350 BC. (from Punch-marked coins)
-
Image 22Undated Kelzang tangka (1910), obverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 24Tibetan kong par tangka, dated 13-45 (= AD 1791),reverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 25Sino Tibetan silver tangka, dated 58th year of Qian Long era, reverse. Weight 5.57 g. Diameter: 30 mm (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 27Tenga of Muhammad Khudayar Khan, struck at the Kokand mint, dated 1862–1863 (from Kokand tenga)
-
Image 28Gold coins are an example of legal tender that are traded for their intrinsic value, rather than their face value. (from Money)
-
Image 29Athens coin (c. 500/490-485 BC) discovered in Pushkalavati. This coin is the earliest known example of its type to be found so far east. (from Punch-marked coins)
-
Image 30Tibetan silver tangka with Ranjana (Lantsa) script, dated 15-28 (= AD 1894), reverse (from Tibetan tangka)
-
Image 31US dollar banknotes (from Money)
-
Image 32Tibetan undated silver tangka (2nd half of 18th century) with eight times the syllable "dza" in vartula script,obverse (from Tibetan tangka)