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Bangladeshi taka: Encyclopedia BETA


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Bangladeshi taka



The Taka is the official currency of Bangladesh. Also, in neighboring India, speakers of Bengali and Assamese use the term taka to refer to the Indian Rupee. In Bangladesh, the symbol (or Tk, in English) is used to represent taka; for example, , 50 or Tk 50 would represent 50 taka. It is subdivided into 100 paise (sometimes spelled poisha)
Bangladeshi taka coins
1tk.jpg

Bangladeshi 1 taka coin

5_taka_coin.jpg

Bangladeshi 5 taka coin

History

The word is derived from the Sanskrit tanka which was an ancient, even in medieval times, denomination of silver coin. The term taka was widely used in different parts of India but with varying meanings. In north India, taka was a copper coin equal to two paise and in the south, it was equal to four paisa or one anna. It was only in Bengal where taka was equal to the rupee. In all areas of India, taka was used informally for money in general. But Bengal was the stronghold of taka.

Rupee was introduced by the Turko-Afghan rulers and was strongly upheld by the Mughals and the British rulers. The Bengali people always used the word taka for the rupee, whether silver or gold. Ibn Batuta noticed that, in Bengal, people described gold coins (Dinar) as gold tanka and silver coin as silver tanka. In other words, whatever might be the metallic content of the coin, the people called it taka. This tradition has been followed to this day in Assamese and Bengali speaking regions like Bangladesh, West Bengal and Assam.

The taka became Bangladesh's currency in 1972, replacing the Pakistani rupee at par.

Denominations

Coins

*1 poisha (rarely circulated)
*5 poisha (rarely circulated)
*10 poisha (rarely circulated)
*25 poisha(rarely circulated)
*50 poisha(rarely circulated)
*1 taka
*2 taka
*5 taka

The denominations of the Bangladeshi taka previously in circulation are:
Circulating Coins
ImageValue Diameter Weight Composition Obverse Reverse Minted Year

10 paise

10 paise?? mm?? g??????1983
- bgcolor = "#ffffff"

50 paise

50 paise?? mm?? g??????1973
- bgcolor = "#dddddd"

25 paise

25 paise?? mm?? g??????1983
- bgcolor = "#ffffff"

10 paise

10 paise?? mm?? g??????1978
- bgcolor = "#dddddd"

5 paise

5 paise?? mm?? g??????1978
- bgcolor = "#ffffff"

10 paise

10 paise?? mm?? g??????1979
- bgcolor = "#dddddd"

50 paise

50 paise?? mm?? g??????1984
- bgcolor = "#ffffff"

10 paise

10 paise?? mm?? g??????1983
- bgcolor = "#dddddd"

25 paise

25 paise?? mm?? g??????1999
These images are to scale at ?? pixels per millimeter, a standard for world coins.

Treasurynotes

*1 taka
*2 taka

Banknotes

*1 taka
*2 taka
*5 taka
*10 taka
*20 taka
*50 taka
*100 taka
*500 taka

In the late 90's, the government issued polymer 10-taka notes as an experiment (similar to the Australian dollar). They proved unpopular, however, and were withdrawn later. At present, the 1-taka notes are gradually being replaced with coins.

Issuance

The 1 and 2 taka notes are issued by the Government of Bangladesh. The rest of the notes are issued by Bangladeshs central bank, the Bangladesh Bank.

External links

* Bangladesh Bank's page on currencies in circulation



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