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Pooja's marriage in trouble Pooja Lama's scandal marriage ending

Everybody carries Khagendra Khagendra Thapa Magar kissed Rekha Thapa

Nepali Notes - Historical photo profile

  • stories

(1951) (Tribhuvan)



5 Rupees (1961)  Mahendra



100 Rupees (1961) King Mahendra


1000 Rupees (1972) (King Mahendra)

1 Rupee (1974)



10 Rupees (1974)


2 Rupees (1981-) (King Birendra)


Compre the monies.......


Rs 250 latest but not so common


Quote from: Xteam on August 18, 2008, 05:30:36 AM
great work yxz bro keep it up hai
Quote from: MoMo_Killer on August 18, 2008, 03:02:30 AM
Ekdam ramro lagyo.. interesting stuffs... thankx


Thanks




Five Rupees Note(back)



Five Rupees Note(front)




1 Mohru Note(back)



1 Mohru Note(front)


5 Mohru Note(back)

5 Mohru Note(front)

10 Mohru Note(back)


10 Mohru Note(front)

5 Mohru Note(front)

10 Mohru Note(front)

One Rupee Note(back)


Five Rupees Note(back)

Ten Rupees Note(Back)

One Hundred Rupees Note

1 Rupee, (1972)

One Rupee Note(back)

One Rupee Note(front)
Current money photos are located at this flickr page
http://www.flickr.com/photos/41894180030@N01/sets/72157605615197522/


Description:The country of Nepal, uses a currency called rupees. Nepal has had coins for about 600 (?) years, but they’ve only had paper currency since the mid-1940s*.

Currently Nepal has eleven different note denominations (1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 25, 50, 100, 250, 500, 1000).

Nepal’s neighbor India also uses money called rupees, but they are in fact different currencies -- like how neighbors Canada and the United States both use something called the dollar.

The current Nepali rupee notes vary in length depending on denomination, but they all share a width (top to bottom) of approximately 7.03 cm.

*There's a story that in the old coin-only days (pre-1940s) people mountain climbing would have to hire an extra porter solely for carrying all of the coins they'd need along the way.


1 Rupee, (1965)




100 Mohru, (1960)




xNepali