Restocking Fee No
Return shipping will be paid by Buyer
All returns accepted Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within 30 Days
Refund will be given as Money Back
Circulated/Uncirculated Uncirculated
Type Banknotes
Year 2000
Certification Number 4780202
Country Belarus
Grade Ungraded
Country/Region of Manufacture Belarus
Modified Item No
Certification Uncertified

Check the listing for details. 2000 Belarus 10 Rubles Uncirculated Banknote ISO 4217 code BYR TA 4780202 Crisp!. Listed at 5.00 USD. From Wikipedia....First ruble, 1992–2000[edit]As a result of the breakup of the supply chain in the former Soviet enterprises, goods started to be bought and sold in the market, often requiring cash settlement. The Belarusian unit of the USSR State Bank had neither the capacity nor the licence to print Soviet banknotes, so the government decided to introduce its own national currency to ease the cash situation. The German word Thaler (Belarusian: талер), divided into 100 Groschen (Belarusian: грош) was suggested as the name for a Belarusian currency, but the Communist majority in the Supreme Soviet of Belarus rejected the proposal and stuck to the word rublethat had been used in Belarus from the times of the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire.[3] The word ruble has also been used as a name for a currency in circulation in the medieval Grand Duchy of Lithuania, of which Belarus was a major part (see Lithuanian long currency).From the collapse of the Soviet Union until May 1992, the Soviet ruble circulated in Belarus alongside the Belarusian ruble. New Russian banknotes also circulated in Belarus, but were replaced by notes issued by the National Bank of the Republic of Belarus in May 1992.[4] The first post-Soviet Belarusian ruble was assigned the ISO code BYB and replaced the Soviet currency at the rate of 1 Belarusian ruble = 10 Soviet rubles. It took about two years before the ruble became the official currency of the country.[4]Second ruble, 2000–2016[edit]In 2000, a new ruble was introduced (ISO 4217 code BYR), replacing the first at a rate of 1 BYR = 1,000 BYB. This was redenomination with three zeros removed. Only banknotes were issued; coins were mintedsolely as commemorative collectibles.[4]

$4.00
$5.00