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<p>[QUOTE="Troodon, post: 531657, member: 4626"]I have this note... and for about 16 years it was the record holder for the most zeroes ever on a note (Hungary had higher nominal denominations than that, but they used words rather then printing out all the digits).</p><p><br /></p><p>However, due to their recent hyperinflation, Zimbabwe has put out four notes that have beaten this note's record, with their recent 10, 20, 50, and 100 trillion dollar notes, all with the digits printed out.</p><p><br /></p><p>Highest nominal denomination ever released still belongs to Hungary, with their note that in short form, was 10 quintillion (1 followed by 20 zeores, if they printed all the digits) pengo! They printed a note 10 times higher than that, but switched to the forint before it was released.</p><p><br /></p><p>Back to the original subject, during this period Serbian Krajina, a short-lived unrecognized breakaway republic (consists of part of what is now Croatia) put out their Krajina dinar. Since it was fixed to the Yugoslav dinar at a 1:1 exchange rate, it had the same hyperinflated denominations, though the highest denominated note only reached 50 billion dinars.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Troodon, post: 531657, member: 4626"]I have this note... and for about 16 years it was the record holder for the most zeroes ever on a note (Hungary had higher nominal denominations than that, but they used words rather then printing out all the digits). However, due to their recent hyperinflation, Zimbabwe has put out four notes that have beaten this note's record, with their recent 10, 20, 50, and 100 trillion dollar notes, all with the digits printed out. Highest nominal denomination ever released still belongs to Hungary, with their note that in short form, was 10 quintillion (1 followed by 20 zeores, if they printed all the digits) pengo! They printed a note 10 times higher than that, but switched to the forint before it was released. Back to the original subject, during this period Serbian Krajina, a short-lived unrecognized breakaway republic (consists of part of what is now Croatia) put out their Krajina dinar. Since it was fixed to the Yugoslav dinar at a 1:1 exchange rate, it had the same hyperinflated denominations, though the highest denominated note only reached 50 billion dinars.[/QUOTE]
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