Guest Posts, Link Building, SEO, Pay-Per-Click campaigns
Advanced Search
Home / Features / UAE Dirham Celebrates 44 years
Special Features

UAE Dirham Celebrates 44 years

As the UAE dirham completes its 44th year on May 19, the currency celebrates its unified form representing the seven emirates after undergoing several transformations. The 1973 born banknotes began their journey in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 50 and 100, displaying the watermark of an Arabian horse – which was later changed to falcon, the national bird of UAE. The date also marks the formation of United Arab Emirates Currency Board which issued the new notes bearing various local environmental landmarks and geographical boundaries of the UAE.

“The very first denominations were imprinted with landmarks that represented each emirate separately with the name of emirate on the bank note,” said Mr Ram Kumar, Founder of Numisbing, a Dubai-based numismatics company, and President of International Bank Note Society, Dubai Chapter, “For example, 1 AED carried the picture of the Clock Tower and Police Fort in Sharjah, while 5 dirham note had Fujairah’s Old Fort on it. The 10 dirham note showed an aerial view of Umm Al Quwain and the 50 dirham note displayed the palace of HH Ruler of Ajman. The 100 AED was imprinted with a picture of Al Rams area in Ras Al Khaimah. Representations from Dubai and Abu Dhabi were introduced with 1000 dirham notes in 1976, which featured Al Jahilie Fort of Abu Dhabi and an old fort of Dubai.” 

In December 1980, when the UAE Currency Board was replaced by UAE Central Bank, the notes issued by Currency Board were slowly withdrawn from circulation. At the back of all the denominations, the names of the seven emirates were also removed and new notes with different designs and colours were introduced.

“Today, the old notes are collectables and many locals and expats who have been living in the UAE for a longer time have preserved them as a part of the country's history. A used set of UAE first issue notes from 1 to 100 Dirhams are available at different antique shops including Numisbing. Generally speaking, the prices begin at AED 1500 and the starting price of first 1000 Dirhams note would be from AED 4000”.

Prior to the introduction of UAE dirham, the region used several currencies including the Indian rupee, the Gulf rupee, the Qatari riyal, Dubai riyal and Bahraini dinar (used in Abu Dhabi) during different phases.

 



We accept Guest Posts

  All fields are mandatory
Your Name
Email
City
Country
Your Comments
 Max 250 characters - Word Count :
Image Verification
Change Image

     


View Special Features by Category.
Airlines & Airports
Art & Gallery
Banks & Financial sector
Business
Car Industry
Construction
Dubai Government
Dubai Metro
E-Guides
Eco-Friendly
Education & Institutions
Electronics
Entertainment
Events & Occassions
Exhibition Center
Family Shows
Food & Beverages
Free Zones
Golf Clubs
Government Departments
Health & Fitness
History & Culture
Home/Furnishing/Interiors
Hospitals & Clinics
Hotels & Hospitality
Identity cards
Internet Services
Media & News
Mortgage
Music
Online Food Service
Online Store
Organisations
Other
Other Emirates
Parks & Beaches
Precious Metals
Real Estate & Property
Religion & Culture
Resorts & Clubs
Restaurants
Shopping Malls
Spas
Special Centres, Groups & Communities
Sports & Events
Sports Bars
Technology
Things To Do
Trade Fair
Travel & Leisure
UAE Market News
VIP Services
Wedding Planners

Back to top






Hotels hotels Check out Hotels in Dubai
Shopping shopping A complete Mall & Store Guide
Dining dining Eating out at the coolest spots
Sightseeing sightseeing Things to see & do
DCG Recommends dcg recommends Best of the best in Entertainment
News Alerts
News Alerts
Stay ahead with dubai news
dcg mobile
dcg Mobile
With you wherever you go
rss feed
RSS Feeds
Get the latest
dubai blog
Dubai Blog
Your space, your voice
sitemap
Sitemap
DCG at a glance