On 7/18/11, d.b.prasanna kumar <
nanda...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
> D.B.Prasanna Kumar
> Insurance &Investment consultant
> Nandaadeepa ServiceCentre
> Office: 33| 5th Cross |1st Main | Jai Maruthi Nagar| Nandini Lay-out |
> Bangalore-560096 | India .Mobile: 9448088415 |
9844486896 | Phone:
>
+918023498413> | Email:
nanda...@yahoo.com
> No longer a legal tender: The road has finally come to an end for the humble
> 25
> paise coin. The Reserve Bank of India is withdrawing from circulation coins
> of
> 25 paise and below from June 30, 2011. Coins of denomination of 25 paise and
> below will not be accepted for exchange at the bank branches from July 1,
> 2011
> onwards. We trace the history of the 25 paise coin from the British era to
> contemporary India.
>
> 1830s: The first of the quarter rupee coins were issued in India during the
> reign of William IV. The coins were made of silver.
>
> 1840s: The longest reigning monarch of the United Kingdom, Queen Victoria
> also
> held the title of the Empress of India. During her reign a number of quarter
> rupee coins were issued. Soon after her ascent to the throne, a silver
> quarter
> rupee coin was issued in India. The coins featured the bust of a young Queen
> Victoria. She was made the queen soon after her 18th birthday
>
> 1870s: The coins issued later in Queen Victoria's reign had a more mature
> looking bust of the queen. The one-fourth rupee coins were made of silver.
>
> 1890s: While Queen Victoria was adding to her years in real life, she also
> put
> in a bit of weight on the her image on the coins.
>
> 1900s: The new century also witnessed a change on the British monarchy.
> Following the death of his mother Queen Victoria, Edward VII was crowned as
> the
> King of the United Kingdom and also as the Emperor of India. All new coins
> issued during the time bore his name and face.
>
> 1910s: A new design of coins were introduced in 1919 that sought to replace
> the
> existing silver quarter rupee coins. The new equivalent of the quarter rupee
> coin was the 4 aana coin, that was made from cupro-nickel instead of silver.
> The
> rising silver prices following the First World War necessitated this change.
> These coins had the effigy of King George V.
>
> 1920s: George V was crowned the King in 1910. He was also the first reigning
> British Monarch to tour India. The 4 aana coins introduced in 1919 didn't
> gain
> popularity and soon the quarter rupee coins had to be brought back.
>
> 1930s: King George VI was the last of the British monarchs to rule over
> India.
> His predecessor Edward VIII abdicated the throne in order to marry divorced
> American socialite Wallis Simpson. There were no coins issued for Edward
> VIII.
> While coins of other denominations went for a design change, the quarter
> rupee
> coins continued, with only a new monarch replacing the old.
>
> Early 1950s: Following the Independence of India the currency system
> continued
> with the British series of coins till the establishment of the Indian
> Republic.
> The first coins of independent India were introduced on August 15, 1950 and
> it
> included the quarter rupee coin made of nickel. The coins had the words
> 'char
> aana' embossed in Devnagri script and had the Ashoka Emblem on one side.
>
> Late 1950s: Another major landmark in the history of the 25 paise coin
> happened
> following the introduction of the decimal series in accordance with the
> Indian
> Coinage Act that came into force from April 1, 1957. The 19 mm 25 paise
> coins
> were called '25 naye paise'. The tern 'naye paise' was used for wider public
> recognition of the new coinage system and was discontinued from June 1, 1964
> when the term 'naye' was dropped. The coins weighed 5 grams and were made of
> nickel.
>
> 1970s: By the late 1960s, Indians had become used to the new coinage system.
> The
> text 'rupaiye ka chautha bhag' (one fourth of a rupee) was also replaced by
> 25
> paise. While other coins of lower denominations underwent a major change and
> moved to aluminium, the 25 paise coin didn't change much.
>
> Late 1980s to the 2000s: In 1988 the 25 paisa coin went steel and was made
> of
> ferratic stainless steel. It was a little heavier than its predecessor at
> 2.83
> grams but was of the same size. The last 25 paise coins seen in popular
> circulation were minted in the year 2002.
>
> A new symbol: In July 2010 the Government of India unveiled the new symbol
> for
> the Indian Rupee and designer D Udaya Kumar also designed a new symbol for
> the
> paise. But with the 25 paise going out of circulation we are unlikely to see
> the
> image above anywhere.
>
> --
> A Candle looses nothing by lightening another!
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