Money Facts
The first coins
Coins made from gold and silver were used in Lydia, an ancient Middle Eastern kingdom, in about 687-652 BC. The coins were known as staters.
Largest coins
Swedish 10-daler copper coins (made in 1644) weighed 19.71km.
Smallest coins
The silver quarter-jawa was made in Nepal in about 1740 and weighed only 0.002g. You would need half a million of them to equal a kilogram.
Most coins made
The US Mint makes more than 12 billion coins every year. Almost 7 billion of them are 1-cent coins. There are nearly 25 billion UK coins in circulation, worth a total of over 3 billion.
Banknotes
Paper money was first made in China in the 13th century. The first European notes were made in Sweden in 1548. Banknotes were issued in America in 1690 and in England in 1695.
Largest banknotes
One-guan Chinese notes from the late 14th century measured 22.8. 33cm bigger than a page of this book.
Smallest banknotes
Romanian 10-bani notes of 1917 had a printed area of just 27.5 . 38mm, which is not much bigger than a postage stamp.
Cheques
The first cheque was issued in London on 22 April 1659. It was for E 10 and made payable to the bearer by Nicholas Vanacker. It was drawn on the bank of Clayton & Morris. The original cheque was sold for E 1,300 at Sothebys, London in 1976.
Credit cards
The first credit card was invented by Frank X. McNamara in the USA and issued in 1950 by Diners Club. Holograms were first used for security on Visa cards in the US in 1984. Smart cards (cards with built-in microchips) were introduced in France in 1975. There are about 120 million credit and debit cards in the UK, about four for each adult.
Travellers Cheques
American Express in the USA issued the first as early as 1891.
ATM
The worlds first ATM (Automated Teller Machine, or cashpoint) began operation on 27 June 1967 at Barclays Bank, Enfield, London.
Euro
The new European currency was introduced in 1999 and was taken up by most European Union countries on 1 January 2002.
Did you find this article useful? For more useful tips, hints, guide and points to ponder pertaining to traveling, do please browse at our websites.
Coins made from gold and silver were used in Lydia, an ancient Middle Eastern kingdom, in about 687-652 BC. The coins were known as staters.
Largest coins
Swedish 10-daler copper coins (made in 1644) weighed 19.71km.
Smallest coins
The silver quarter-jawa was made in Nepal in about 1740 and weighed only 0.002g. You would need half a million of them to equal a kilogram.
Most coins made
The US Mint makes more than 12 billion coins every year. Almost 7 billion of them are 1-cent coins. There are nearly 25 billion UK coins in circulation, worth a total of over 3 billion.
Banknotes
Paper money was first made in China in the 13th century. The first European notes were made in Sweden in 1548. Banknotes were issued in America in 1690 and in England in 1695.
Largest banknotes
One-guan Chinese notes from the late 14th century measured 22.8. 33cm bigger than a page of this book.
Smallest banknotes
Romanian 10-bani notes of 1917 had a printed area of just 27.5 . 38mm, which is not much bigger than a postage stamp.
Cheques
The first cheque was issued in London on 22 April 1659. It was for E 10 and made payable to the bearer by Nicholas Vanacker. It was drawn on the bank of Clayton & Morris. The original cheque was sold for E 1,300 at Sothebys, London in 1976.
Credit cards
The first credit card was invented by Frank X. McNamara in the USA and issued in 1950 by Diners Club. Holograms were first used for security on Visa cards in the US in 1984. Smart cards (cards with built-in microchips) were introduced in France in 1975. There are about 120 million credit and debit cards in the UK, about four for each adult.
Travellers Cheques
American Express in the USA issued the first as early as 1891.
ATM
The worlds first ATM (Automated Teller Machine, or cashpoint) began operation on 27 June 1967 at Barclays Bank, Enfield, London.
Euro
The new European currency was introduced in 1999 and was taken up by most European Union countries on 1 January 2002.
Did you find this article useful? For more useful tips, hints, guide and points to ponder pertaining to traveling, do please browse at our websites.
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