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Date for today: Friday 18th of May 2012 05:14:00 AM
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Enter the unit of currency for which you are interested and click next table. If you enter 1 Bangladeshi Taka (BDT) for example, you will receive its equivalent in Dollars, Euros, Dinars, Liras, Levs, Rubles etc. You can enter any arbitrary amount of currencies below. Rates are updated daily and accuracy is provide by Google gadgets.

Bangladeshi Taka (BDT) is the currency of Bangladesh. It has the ISO 4217 code BDT and is subdivided into 100 poisha. The symbols in English Tk are used to represent the taka. For example Tk 50 would represent 50 taka.

Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)
Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)

Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)
Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)


In 1971, the erstwhile province of East Pakistan became the independent nation of Bangladesh with the Pakistan Rupee as its interim currency. The taka became Bangladesh's currency in 1972, replacing the Pakistani rupee at par. The word "taka" is derived from the Sanskrit term tanka which was an ancient 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 and Orissa where taka was equal to rupee. In all areas of India, taka was used informally for money in general. However, Bengal was the stronghold of taka.

The 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 Battuta, the Arab traveller, 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.


Banknotes of Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)
In 1973, coins were introduced in denominations of 5, 10, 25 and 50 poisha. 1 poisha coins followed in 1974, with 1 taka coins introduced in 1975. The 1, 5 and 10 poisha were struck in aluminium, with the 25 and 50 poisha struck in steel and the 1 taka in copper-nickel. The 5 poisha were square with rounded corners, whilst the 10 poisha were scalloped. Steel 5 taka were introduced in 1994, whilst a steel 2 taka coin followed in 2004. 1 and 5 poisha coins are rarely found in circulation. 10, 25, and 50 poisha coins do not circulate widely. Only the 1, 2 and 5 taka are regularly found in circulation.

Paper money of Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)
In 1971, Pakistani notes for 1, 5 and 10 rupees were overstamped for use in Bangladesh. These were followed in 1972 by treasury notes for 1 taka and notes of the Bangladesh Bank for 5, 10 and 100 taka. In 1975, banknotes for 50 taka were introduced, followed by 500 taka in 1977 and 20 taka in 1980. 1 taka treasury notes were issued until 1984, with 2 taka treasury notes introduced in 1989.

 


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