East African rupee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The rupee was the currency of Britain's East African colonies and protectorates between 1906 and 1920. It was divided into 100 cents.

The rupee replaced the Indian rupee, which had previously circulated, with the value of the East African currency equal to that of India. In 1920, the rupee was revalued against sterling to a peg of 1 rupee = 2 shillings (1 florin). In East Africa, this was followed in the same year by the replacement of the rupee with the East African florin at par.

The currency is noteworthy for including the world's first aluminium coin, the 1906 1 cent.

[edit] References


Preceded by:
Indian rupee
Ratio: at par
Currency of East Africa
(Kenya, Uganda)
19061920
Succeeded by:
East African florin
Ratio: at par
Preceded by:
German East African rupie
Reason: Tanganyika given to United Kingdom by Treaty of Versailles
Ratio: at par
Currency of Tanganyika
19191920


Rupees
Current Indian rupee | Indonesian rupiah | Maldivian rufiyaa | Mauritian rupee | Nepalese rupee | Pakistani rupee | Seychellois rupee | Sri Lankan rupee
Defunct Afghan rupee | Bhutanese rupee | Burmese rupee | Danish Indian rupee | (British) East African rupee | French Indian rupee | German East African rupie | Gulf rupee | Hyderabad rupee | Italian Somaliland rupia | Netherlands Indian roepiah | Portuguese Indian rupia | Riau rupiah | Travancore rupee | West New Guinean rupiah | Zanzibari rupee
Fictional Hyrulean rupee
See also History of the rupee
This box: view  talk  edit