Numismatics Channel | 100 Serbian Dinars Banknote (Hundred Dinars Serbia: 2013) Obverse & Reverse @helsinkiphoto | Uploaded 8 years ago | Updated 3 days ago
100 Serbian Dinars Banknote (Hundred Dinars Serbia: 2013) Obverse & Reverse
Sto Dinara - 100 Dinara Narodne Banke Srbije / 2013
Serbia Banknotes: Pick-41
Obverse: Nikola Tesla (1856 1943), inventor.
Reverse: A detail from the Tesla electro-magnetic induction engine.
Color: Light Blue
Serbian Currency - Value 100 RSD
Issued by: Narodna Banka Srbije - National Bank of Serbia
Issued: 2013
Size: 143 x 68 [mm]
Printer: Institute for Manufacturing Banknotes and Coins - Topider, Belgrade Serbia
Security Features: watermark, security strip, hologram, security fibers, micro-printing, see-through register, optically variable Ink, UV protection
Symbol: RSD - - din
Notes: Redesigned in 2003, 2004 and 2006. A revised issue entered circulation in 2012.
Slang: "Sto Dindzi"
---------------------------
Third modern dinar (2003present):
The Serbian dinar replaced the Yugoslav dinar at par in 2003, when Yugoslavia was transformed into the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Montenegro had already adopted the Deutsche Mark and later the euro when the mark was replaced by it.
The dinar (Serbian: / dinar; pronounced [dnar]; dinara / ) is the currency of Serbia. The earliest use of the dinar dates back to 1214
100 Serbian Dinars Banknote (Hundred Dinars Serbia: 2013) Obverse & Reverse
Sto Dinara - 100 Dinara Narodne Banke Srbije / 2013
Serbia Banknotes: Pick-41
Obverse: Nikola Tesla (1856 1943), inventor.
Reverse: A detail from the Tesla electro-magnetic induction engine.
Color: Light Blue
Serbian Currency - Value 100 RSD
Issued by: Narodna Banka Srbije - National Bank of Serbia
Issued: 2013
Size: 143 x 68 [mm]
Printer: Institute for Manufacturing Banknotes and Coins - Topider, Belgrade Serbia
Security Features: watermark, security strip, hologram, security fibers, micro-printing, see-through register, optically variable Ink, UV protection
Symbol: RSD - - din
Notes: Redesigned in 2003, 2004 and 2006. A revised issue entered circulation in 2012.
Slang: "Sto Dindzi"
---------------------------
Third modern dinar (2003present):
The Serbian dinar replaced the Yugoslav dinar at par in 2003, when Yugoslavia was transformed into the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Montenegro had already adopted the Deutsche Mark and later the euro when the mark was replaced by it.
The dinar (Serbian: / dinar; pronounced [dnar]; dinara / ) is the currency of Serbia. The earliest use of the dinar dates back to 1214