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  1. The dinar (Cyrillic: динар) was the currency of Yugoslavia. It was introduced in 1920 in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was replaced by the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and then the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The dinar was subdivided into 100 para (Cyrillic: пара).

  2. O dinar iugoslavo (ISO 4217: YUM, abreviado como din ou дин) era a unidade monetária dos três extintos estados iugoslavos: o Reino da Iugoslávia, a República Socialista Federativa da Iugoslávia e a República Federal da Iugoslávia entre 1918 e 2006. O dinar era subdividido em 100 para .

  3. The Serbian dinar replaced the Yugoslav dinar in 2003 when the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was transformed into the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Both Montenegro and the disputed territory of Kosovo had already adopted the Deutsche Mark and later the euro when the mark was replaced by it in 2002.

    Value
    Technical Parameters(diameter)
    Technical Parameters(mass)
    Technical Parameters(composition)
    din. 1
    20 mm
    4.34g
    70% Cu, 12% Ni, 18% Zn
    din. 1
    20 mm
    4.26g
    75% Cu, 0,5% Ni, 24,5% Zn
    din. 1*
    20 mm
    4.2g
    Multilayer; low carbon steel core coated ...
    din. 2
    22 mm
    5.24g
    70% Cu, 12% Ni, 18% Zn
  4. In the 1980s the Yugoslav economy entered a period of continuous crisis. Between 1979 and 1985 the Yugoslav dinar plunged from 15 to 1,370 to the U.S. dollar, half of the income from exports was used to service the debt, while real net personal income declined by 19.5%.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DinarDinar - Wikipedia

    Dinar. Nations in dark green currently use the dinar. Nations in light green previously used the dinar. States of former Yugoslavia appear in the inset to the lower left. The dinar ( / dɪˈnɑːr /) is the name of the principal currency unit in several countries near the Mediterranean Sea, with a more widespread historical use.