Where the heck is this from?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by Hiddendragon, Apr 11, 2014.

  1. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    It has Cyrillic letters but an Asian looking man as the portrait. Best I could guess was Mongolia or some Soviet Asian territory, though I don't know why they'd have their own currency in 1955. Scan.jpg Scan2.jpg
     
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  3. Peter T Davis

    Peter T Davis Hammer at the Ready Moderator

  4. Yankee42

    Yankee42 Well-Known Member

    It is a Mongolian banknote. They did not print their own currency at that time so it was printed in the USSR.
     
  5. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Thanks. So my guess was correct.
     
  6. Peter T Davis

    Peter T Davis Hammer at the Ready Moderator

    Yep, it was a good guess. I can read a bit of Russian, not much, but just enough to pick out a few words on the note and one of the words was 'Mongol' and the website I linked above has some good details about the series..
     
  7. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Yes, I read the website. It's very interesting. I don't know much about Mongolia.
     
  8. Peter T Davis

    Peter T Davis Hammer at the Ready Moderator

  9. josh's coins

    josh's coins Well-Known Member

    Why mongolians of course.
    Only thing I can tel you about mongolia is ghenghis khan and kubai khan. Those guys had the largest empire in civilization, Record broken by ussr
     
  10. Collector1966

    Collector1966 Senior Member

  11. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Haven't either of you ever had a Mongolian omelet? It's just like a Denver omelet, but the ingredients are different.

    Chris
     
  12. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Well strictly speaking that note isn't in Russian; it's in Mongolian, just happens to be written in Cyrillic. In 1941 the government mandated converting the Mongolian language into Cyrillic as part of a campaign to increase literacy (and to be fair, it was a huge success; from 1941 to 1950 the literacy went from less than 20% to almost 75%).
     
  13. Peter T Davis

    Peter T Davis Hammer at the Ready Moderator

    well that might explain why I didn't recognize more of the words.
     
  14. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    In any case it was a nice pickup for $1.50. I'm not a currency collector really but I buy notes that are cheap and catch my eye. I got about 8 or so at the coin show I attended on Friday.
     
  15. MEC2

    MEC2 Enormous Member

    [​IMG]
     
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