Category
page 5Modern obsolete currencies
Qing dynasty coinage
historical coinage of China
Tenpō Tsūhō
Japanese coin from the Edo period
Cornado
thumb|Cornado minted in Toledo, Spain|Toledo during the reign of [[Sancho IV of Castile (1284–1295)]]
thumb|Kingdom of Navarre|Navarran cornado minted in 1757, during the reign of Ferdinand VI
Cornado is the common name of several Castilian coins made of copper or billon (an alloy of silver and copper), minted from the time of Sancho IV of Castile (13th century) until that of the Catholic Monarchs (16th century).
Iraqi Swiss dinar
Wikimedia list article
Prince Edward Island dollar
unit of currency used in Prince Edward Island
bolognino
thumb|320px|Bolognino of Pope Urban V (1362-1370).
thumb|320px|A bolognino struck in Republican Perugia (1395-1471).
Silbergroschen
The Silbergroschen was a coin used in Prussia and several other German Confederation states in northern Germany during the 19th century, worth one thirtieth of a Thaler.
Honduran peso
currency of Honduras between 1862 and 1931
Danish Indian rupee
currency of Danish India
Ceylonese rixdollar
erstwhile currency of British Ceylon
Zanzibari ryal
currency of Zanzibar from 1882-1908
Tokugawa coinage
monetary system in Japan
Danish West Indian daler
currency formerly used in the Danish West Indies
Poltura
thumb|150px|Copper poltura coin from the time of Rákóczi's War for Independence. (1704)
The poltura is a historic Hungarian monetary unit that was struck under the Hungarian rulers Leopold I, Joseph I, Francis II Rákóczi, Charles III and Maria Theresa. Its forerunner was the Polish półtorak, a coin equal to one and one-half grosz (półtora means one and a half in Polish).
French Equatorial African franc
The franc was the currency of French Equatorial Africa.
Fyrk
left|Copper fyrk from Arboga (1627)|138x138px
A fyrk was a monetary unit used in Sweden in the 15th to 17th century, with a value of between 1/6 and 1/2 öre. The word is derived from Middle Low German vereken (vierichen) and ultimately from ver or vier, a monetary unit (from vier, "four"). After the monetary unit had been abolished, the word remained in use in the general sense of "small money", "pennies", "an insignificant sum"; and as a slang word for "money" in Finland Swedish, from where it is borrowed in Finnish slang (as ).
Maldivian laari
coin denomination issued by the Maldives
South Korean won (1945–1953)
former South Korean currency (1945–1953)
Central American Republic real
Nepalese mohar
currency used from 17th to 20th centuries
Azorean real
currency of the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores, used until 1931
Ryukyuan mon
currency used in Ryukyu kingdom
pūl
coin
Vietnamese cash
Old currency of Vietnam.
Sumatran dollar
currency
Catalan peseta
former currency of Catalonia
Piedmontese scudo
currency of the Piedmont and the other mainland parts of the Savoyard Kingdom of Sardinia until 1816
New Brunswick dollar
currency
Peruvian peseta
former currency of Peru (1880–82)
Parman lira
currency of Parma before 1802 and again from 1815 to 1859
Bolivian sol
currency of Bolivia between 1827 and 1864
Fribourg frank
Chinese customs gold unit
former currency of China
Israeli pruta
currency denomination
Guadeloupe franc
currency of Guadeloupe until 2002
Kan’ei Tsūhō
former currency in Japan
British Columbia dollar
currency of British Columbia (1865-1871)
Tongan pound
currency of Tonga until 1967
Mandats territoriaux
Mandats territoriaux were paper bank Note
Sardinian scudo
currency of the island Kingdom of Sardinia until 1816
French Guianan franc
currency of French Guiana until 2002
Cape Verdean real
former currency of Portuguese Cape Verde until 1914.
Hejaz Saudi riyal
currency of the Hejaz of Saudi Arabia between 1916 and 1925
Cochinchina Piastre
official currency of Cochinchine francaise
won of the Red Army Command
temporary currency in Soviet-occupied Korea
Netherlands New Guinean gulden
currency of Netherlands New Guinea until 1963
Fijian pound
currency of Fiji between 1873 and 1969
Newfoundland pound
Ichibuban
The (lit: "one gold bu") was a monetary unit of Japan. The Ichibuban was a gold coin that was worth a quarter of a Koban.
Młynarki
thumb|right|200px|The 500 Polish zloty|zloty note, so-called "Góral"
Młynarki was the popular name for the currency notes of the General Government (part of German-occupied Poland) during World War II that were issued by the German-controlled Bank of Issue in Poland. They were named after the president of the bank, Feliks Młynarski.
Two Sicilies ducat
currency of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies between 1820 and 1860
Greenlandic rigsdaler
Spanish colonial real
Spanish colonial coinage
German South West African mark
currency of German South West Africa between 1885 and 1915
Aargau frank
former currency in Europe (1798–1850)
Português (coin)
16th century Portuguese gold coin
Bukharan tenga

Tuscan pound
currency of Tuscany until the annexation by Napoleonic France in 1807
Martinique franc
former Currency of Martinique (1855 – 1961)
Costa Rican real
silver Spanish colonial real coin or a silver coin of Costa Rica 19th century