ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base
"The Land of Israel"
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The Land-Israeli capital (in the acronym: No.) was the nickname of the Hebrew profit of the currency that was legal in Israel during the British Mandate, and then the official name of the currency in the State of Israel until 17 August 1948. The official name of the coin during the Mandate period, as appeared on the then silver trick, was "Pont Palestine (I.A.)" (in Arabic: جنيه in English: Palestine Pound). The coin was issued by the Palestine Currency Board, which was subject to the British colonies. After the establishment of the State of Israel, the Anglo-Palestine Bank received the responsibility for the issuing of money and coins, and the notes issued in Hebrew as the name "Laira A" (the name in Arabic and English has not changed). The U.S. was equal in the campaign for the British Riviera, and adjacent to it.
The No. during the Mandate
On 1 September 1927, the U.S. replaced the Egyptian lira in the British Mandate territories in Israel. During a short period of the Second World War, the non-U. was also legal in Cyprus. The U.S. was officially replaced by the Israeli Embassy in Israel in 1952, in the Jordanian newspaper in the Kingdom of Jordan in 1946, and in the West Bank in 1951, and back in the Egyptian capital of the Gaza Strip in 1951.
The lira was divided into 1000 children (in Arabic: مل, in English: Mil). In public, it was also accepted as a division of 100 divorces (a division that originated in the Egyptian fire divided into 100 croaches), so that 10 words were called “graz”, but this division was not official. The coins of one boy and two words from copper were issued, coins of 5, 10 and 20 words from Macpronickel with a hole in the center (the ten-word coin was known as the "Gush with the hole") and coins of 50 children and 100 miles from silver. During World War II, the Copernickel coins were replaced with copper coins, and silver coins in Macpronickel coins. The banknotes issued were 500 children (half), one pound, 5, 10, 50 and 100 to shoot Israeli land. In the UK, the partition of the lira to 20 shilling, 240 Penny, or 960 Perth, but this method was not established in the Land of Israel and in the place of the Tenthical Method. Nevertheless, it was customary to call 50-year-old coins of Shaling because they were equal to the English Shaling.
At the beginning of the state.
Prior to the establishment of the state, the institutions of the community also prepared for the establishment of a coin for the state to be established. The Anglo-Palestine Bank was the financial institution of the Zionist movement and the settlement, and chair of the Bank’s Board of Directors, Eliezer Ziegfried Hopin, succeeded in obtaining the consent of American Banksnot Line in the United States to print money bills to a country that does not exist. The banknotes did not include the state’s name, and the fact that they constitute a legal “law currency for payment of any amount” was later printed in car printing. Since it has not yet been set up there for its state and currency, it is written on the bill "The Bank of England-Palestine shall pay one pound visa" (or the amount of value), and added: "The Bank will receive this bill for payment in any account it is." The banknotes were printed on the signatures of Jeanne Burt. The banknotes were 500 children (half pounds), one A.J., 5, 10, and 50 pounds. The banknotes were brought to Israel in July 1948.
On August 17, 1948, the Provisional State Council announced the Israeli reserve, after several laws were approved that defined the issuing earlier. The casting of the lira was coordinated with the British government, and it was a blessing for the move. With the value of the lira was established in equality in front of the gate of the terling, but in the free market began to trade at approximately 1.14-1.15 in front of the hrling lira. The lira gate in front of the dollar is determined at this time by the Jewish Agency, on $3 per petition.