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  1. And once you’re in the Netherlands, you’ll see the symbol € used to show prices. You’ll find Euro banknotes in denominations of 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 500 - although the 200 and 500 EUR notes are seldom used. There are also 1 and 2 euro coins. Cents come in coins of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50.

  2. Juliana (1948-1980) Type. Standard circulation coin. Years. 1950-1980. Value. 1 Cent (0.01 NLG) Currency. Gulden ( decimalized, 1817-2001)

  3. In 1877, bronze 2½ cent coins were introduced. In 1907, silver 5 cent coins were replaced by cupro-nickel pieces. In 1912, gold 5 guilder coins were reintroduced but the gold coinage was ended in 1933. In 1941, following the German occupation, production of all earlier coin types ceased and zinc coins were introduced for 1, 2½, 5, 10 and 25 ...

  4. In 1817, the first coins of the decimal currency were issued, the copper 1 cent and silver 3 guilder. The remaining denominations were introduced in 1818. These were copper ½ cent, silver 5, 10 and 25 cents, ½ and 1 guilder, and gold 10 guilder. In 1826, gold 5 guilder coins were introduced. In 1840, the silver content of the coinage was ...

  5. It had 1 cent coins struck in England from 1882 and 1/2 cent pieces from 1885. These coins were linked to the silver dollar as used in the Straits Settlement and Hong Kong. In 1904 the Company moved from the use of bronze to copper-nickel for the 1 cent. The one cent coin was struck in copper (or bronze according to some sources) between 1882 ...

  6. One Rand Gold 1961. The South African gold One Rand coin (abbreviated as R 1) is a bullion coin of the Rand currency. It was introduced when the currency was decimalised in 1961 and replaced the earlier pre-decimal pound coin, retaining its design, dimensions and metal content. All the coins of the First Decimal Series initially had the same ...