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1 BEF to BDT Bangladeshi Taka

December 17, 2022 by pkr_to_usd_786

1 BEF to BDT Bangladeshi Taka
The Belgian franc (Dutch: Belgische frank, French: Franc belge, German: Belgischer Franken) was the currency of the Kingdom of Belgium from 1832 until 2002 whe … >>> Find out more from wikipedia. category >>> BEF

1 BEF to BDT Bangladeshi Taka

1 Belgian Franc ( BEF ) = 2.9364911933719 Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)


1 BEF = 2.9364911933719 BDT


1 BDT = 0.34054248221727 BEF


Amount :

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1 Belgian Franc ( BEF ) Is equal to 2.9364911933719 Bangladeshi Taka (BDT)
Belgium Franc
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Belgian Franc
The Belgian franc (Dutch: Belgische frank, French: Franc belge, German: Belgischer Franken) was the currency of the Kingdom of Belgium from 1832 until 2002 when the Euro was introduced. It was subdivided into 100 subunits, known as centiem (Dutch), centimes (French) or Centime (German). The conquest of most of western Europe by revolutionary and Napoleonic France led to the French franc's wide circulation. In the Austrian Netherlands (the current Belgium), the franc replaced the kronenthaler. This was in turn replaced by the Dutch guilder when the United Kingdom of the Netherlands was formed. Following independence from the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the new Kingdom of Belgium in 1832 adopted its own franc, equivalent to the French franc, followed by Luxembourg in 1848 and Switzerland in 1850. Belgian mint working during the late 19th century was innovative and Belgium was the first country to introduce coins made of cupronickel, in 1860 . In 1865, Belgium, France, Switzerland and Italy created the Latin Monetary Union (to be joined by Greece in 1868): each would possess a national currency unit (franc, lira, drachma) worth 4.5 g of silver or 290.322 mg of fine gold, all freely exchangeable at a rate of 1:1. In the 1870s the gold value was made the fixed standard, a situation which was to continue until 1914. In 1926, Belgium, as well as France, experienced depreciation and an abrupt collapse of confidence, leading to the introduction of a new gold currency for international transactions, the Belga worth 5 francs, and the country's withdrawal from the monetary union, which ceased to exist at the end of the year. The Belga was tied to the British pound at a rate of 35 belgas (175 francs) = 1 pound and was thus put on a gold standard of 1 Belga = 209.211 mg fine gold. The 1921 monetary union of Belgium and Luxembourg survived, however, forming the basis for full economic union in 1932. In 1935, the Belgian franc was devalued by 28% to 150.632 mg fine gold and the link between the Luxembourg and Belgian francs was revised to 1 Luxembourgish franc = 1+1⁄4 Belgian francs. Following Belgium's occupation by Germany in May 1940, the franc was fixed at a value of 0.1 Reichsmark, reduced to 0.08 Reichsmark in July 1940. Following liberation in 1944, the franc entered into the Bretton Woods system, with an initial exchange rate of 43.77 francs = US dollar set on 5 October. This was changed to 43.8275 in 1946 and then to 50 following the devaluation of the British pound in September 1949. The Belgian franc was devaluated again in 1982. Like 10 other European currencies, the Belgian/Luxembourgish franc ceased to exist on 1 January 1999, when it became fixed at 1 EUR= 40.3399 BEF/LUF, thus a franc was worth €0.024789. Old franc coins and notes lost their legal tender status on 28 February 2002. Between 1832 and 1834, copper 1, 2, 5 and 10 centime, silver 1⁄4, 1⁄2, 1, 2 and 5 franc, and gold 20 and 40 franc coins were introduced. Some of the early 1 and 2 centimes were struck over Dutch 1⁄2 and 1 cent coins. The 40 franc was not issued after 1841, whilst silver 2+1⁄2 francs and gold 10 and 25 francs were issued between 1848 and 1850. Silver 20 centimes replaced the 1⁄4 franc in 1852. In 1860, cupro-nickel 20 centimes were introduced, followed by cupro-nickel 5 and 10 centimes in 1861. The silver 5 franc was discontinued in 1876. Between 1901 and 1908, holed, cupro-nickel 5, 10 and 25 centime coins were introduced.[citation needed] In 1914, production of the 1 centime and all silver and gold coins ceased. Zinc 5, 10 and 25 centimes were introduced in the German occupied zone, followed by holed, zinc 50 centimes in 1918. Production of 2 centimes ended in 1919. In 1922 and 1923, nickel 50 centime and 1 and 2 franc coins were introduced bearing the text "Good For" ("Bon pour" in French, "Goed Voor" in Dutch). These featured the god Mercury. Nickel-brass replaced cupro-nickel in the 5 and 10 centimes in 1930, followed by the 25 centime in 1938. Nickel 5 and 20 francs were introduced in 1930 and 1931, respectively, followed by silver 20 francs in 1933 and 50 francs in 1939. In 1938 the 5 franc was reduced in size and redesigned along with the 1 franc to depict a lion and heraldic arms. As a consequence of the German occupation in 1940, the silver coinage was discontinued. In 1941, zinc replaced all other metals in the 5, 10 and 25 centimes, and 1 and 5 francs. In 1944 the Allies minted 25 million 2 franc coins at the Philadelphia Mint using leftover planchets for the 1943 steel cent. In 1948, cupro-nickel 5 francs and silver 50 and 100 francs were produced, followed by silver 20 francs in 1949 and cupro-nickel 1 franc in 1950. These coins depicted classical allegoric figures. Bronze 20 and 50 centimes featuring a miner and lantern were minted in 1952. Despite the widely varied dates these coins were issued into circulation only a few years apart as part of a broader currency reform. The silver coinage ceased production after 1955. Cupro-nickel 25 centime coins replaced the 20 centime in 1964. The 25 centime coins were later discontinued in 1975. Nickel 10 francs depicting King Baudouin were introduced in 1969 (only struck until 1979), followed by nickel-bronze 20 francs in 1980 and nickel 50 francs in 1987, all of which - bar the 10 Franc coin - replaced the corresponding banknotes. Aluminium-bronze replaced cupro-nickel in the 5 franc in 1986, whilst nickel-plated iron replaced cupro-nickel in the 1 franc in 1988, which was also significantly reduced in size. These changes coincided with a gradual modernization of the general coinage while older issues were gradually pulled from circulation, similar to what took place during the early postwar years. The new designs were also more identifiable to vending machines and the visually impaired. 1994 saw a redesign of all denominations but the 50 centimes, with a uniform design featuring King Albert II replacing the image of Baudouin. This series ceased production after 2000. Find out more from wikipedia
Bangladeshi Taka
The Bangladeshi taka (Bengali: টাকা, sign: ৳, code: BDT, short form: Tk) is the currency of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. In Unicode, it is encoded at U+09F3 ৳ (HTML ৳). Issuance of bank notes ৳100 and larger is controlled by Bangladesh Bank, while the ৳2 and ৳5 banknotes are the responsibility of the ministry of finance of the government of Bangladesh. The most commonly used symbol for the taka is "৳" and "Tk", used on receipts while purchasing goods and services. It was formerly divided into 100 poysha, but poysha coins are no longer in circulation. According to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language and Banglapedia, the word taka came from the Sanskrit word tankah. Another hypothesis is that the word is derived from a Turkic word Tamga or tamgha, "stamp, seal". After the Partition of Bengal in 1947, East Bengal became the eastern wing of Pakistan and was renamed to East Pakistan in 1956. The Pakistani rupee also bore the word taka on official notes and coins. Bangla was one of the two national languages of the Pakistan union between 1956 and 1971 (the other being Urdu). The Bangladeshi taka came into existence since 1972, a year after the independence of the eastern wing of the union, as the independent nation of Bangladesh. Prior to the Liberation war in 1971, banknotes of the State Bank of Pakistan circulated throughout Bangladesh, and continued to be used in Bangladesh even after independence for only about three months until the official introduction of the taka on 4 March 1972. During the war, it was an unofficial practice of some Bengali nationalists to protest Pakistani rule by stamping banknotes with "বাংলা দেশ" and "BANGLA DESH" as two words in either Bangla or English. These locally produced stamps are known to exist in several varieties, as are forgeries. On 8 June 1971, the Pakistani government declared that all banknotes bearing such stamps ceased to be legal tender. Furthermore, to prevent looted high-denomination notes from disrupting the Pakistani economy, the government also withdrew the legal tender status of all 100- and 500-rupee notes. Some foreign publications mention that there were rubber stamp "BANGLA DESH" overprints on different denominations of Pakistani bank notes during the a.m. period[clarification needed]. It may be mentioned that Pakistani postage stamps were rubber-stamped and used all over Bangladesh until 30 March 1973, but Bangladesh Bank or the Ministry of Finance never issued an order to overprint or rubber-stamp Pakistani currency. It would be interesting to note here, that a counterfeiting gang is active, which uses a "washing system", whereby ৳100 notes are washed with a special kind of liquid, and the numbers are changed to give it the appearance of a ৳500 note. Many Turkic-speaking areas in Central Asia were once centers of Indo-Iranian languages. There was a synthesis of Turkic and Iranian cultures, which is known as the Turco-Persian tradition. The Persianized Turks conquered large parts of the Indian subcontinent, giving rise to an Indo-Persian culture. Many kingdoms that used the currency had Persian and Sanskrit as official languages. The word taka in Bangla is also commonly used generically to mean any money, currency, or notes. Thus, colloquially, a person speaking in Bangla may use "taka" to refer to money regardless of what currency it is denominated in. This is also common in the Indian states of West Bengal and Tripura, where the official name of the Indian rupees is "taka" as well. In other eastern Indian languages with the influence of Prakrit in Bihar it is "taka" in Maithili and Magadhi languages, in Assam it is টকা tôka and it is ଟଙ୍କା taṅkā in Odisha.
Find out more from wikipedia

Convertion Chart BEF to BDT

BDT BEF Bangladeshi Taka BDT
5 BEF = 14.6825 BDT
10 BEF = 29.3649 BDT
15 BEF = 44.0474 BDT
20 BEF = 58.7298 BDT
25 BEF = 73.4123 BDT
30 BEF = 88.0947 BDT
35 BEF = 102.7772 BDT
40 BEF = 117.4596 BDT
45 BEF = 132.1421 BDT
50 BEF = 146.8246 BDT
55 BEF = 161.507 BDT
60 BEF = 176.1895 BDT
65 BEF = 190.8719 BDT
70 BEF = 205.5544 BDT
75 BEF = 220.2368 BDT
80 BEF = 234.9193 BDT
85 BEF = 249.6018 BDT
90 BEF = 264.2842 BDT
95 BEF = 278.9667 BDT
100 BEF = 293.6491 BDT
105 BEF = 308.3316 BDT
110 BEF = 323.014 BDT
115 BEF = 337.6965 BDT
120 BEF = 352.3789 BDT
125 BEF = 367.0614 BDT
130 BEF = 381.7439 BDT
135 BEF = 396.4263 BDT
140 BEF = 411.1088 BDT
145 BEF = 425.7912 BDT
150 BEF = 440.4737 BDT
155 BEF = 455.1561 BDT
160 BEF = 469.8386 BDT
165 BEF = 484.521 BDT
170 BEF = 499.2035 BDT
175 BEF = 513.886 BDT
180 BEF = 528.5684 BDT
185 BEF = 543.2509 BDT
190 BEF = 557.9333 BDT
195 BEF = 572.6158 BDT
200 BEF = 587.2982 BDT
205 BEF = 601.9807 BDT
210 BEF = 616.6632 BDT
215 BEF = 631.3456 BDT
220 BEF = 646.0281 BDT
225 BEF = 660.7105 BDT
230 BEF = 675.393 BDT
235 BEF = 690.0754 BDT
240 BEF = 704.7579 BDT
245 BEF = 719.4403 BDT
250 BEF = 734.1228 BDT
255 BEF = 748.8053 BDT
260 BEF = 763.4877 BDT
265 BEF = 778.1702 BDT
270 BEF = 792.8526 BDT
275 BEF = 807.5351 BDT
280 BEF = 822.2175 BDT
285 BEF = 836.9 BDT
290 BEF = 851.5824 BDT
295 BEF = 866.2649 BDT
300 BEF = 880.9474 BDT
305 BEF = 895.6298 BDT
310 BEF = 910.3123 BDT
315 BEF = 924.9947 BDT
320 BEF = 939.6772 BDT
325 BEF = 954.3596 BDT
330 BEF = 969.0421 BDT
335 BEF = 983.7245 BDT
340 BEF = 998.407 BDT
345 BEF = 1013.0895 BDT
350 BEF = 1027.7719 BDT
355 BEF = 1042.4544 BDT
360 BEF = 1057.1368 BDT
365 BEF = 1071.8193 BDT
370 BEF = 1086.5017 BDT
375 BEF = 1101.1842 BDT
380 BEF = 1115.8667 BDT
385 BEF = 1130.5491 BDT
390 BEF = 1145.2316 BDT
395 BEF = 1159.914 BDT
400 BEF = 1174.5965 BDT
405 BEF = 1189.2789 BDT
410 BEF = 1203.9614 BDT
415 BEF = 1218.6438 BDT
420 BEF = 1233.3263 BDT
425 BEF = 1248.0088 BDT
430 BEF = 1262.6912 BDT
435 BEF = 1277.3737 BDT
440 BEF = 1292.0561 BDT
445 BEF = 1306.7386 BDT
450 BEF = 1321.421 BDT
455 BEF = 1336.1035 BDT
460 BEF = 1350.7859 BDT
465 BEF = 1365.4684 BDT
470 BEF = 1380.1509 BDT
475 BEF = 1394.8333 BDT
480 BEF = 1409.5158 BDT
485 BEF = 1424.1982 BDT
490 BEF = 1438.8807 BDT
495 BEF = 1453.5631 BDT
500 BEF = 1468.2456 BDT

Convertion Chart BDT to BEF

Bangladeshi Taka Bangladeshi Taka BEF BEF
5 BDT = 1.7027 BEF
10 BDT = 3.4054 BEF
15 BDT = 5.1081 BEF
20 BDT = 6.8108 BEF
25 BDT = 8.5136 BEF
30 BDT = 10.2163 BEF
35 BDT = 11.919 BEF
40 BDT = 13.6217 BEF
45 BDT = 15.3244 BEF
50 BDT = 17.0271 BEF
55 BDT = 18.7298 BEF
60 BDT = 20.4325 BEF
65 BDT = 22.1353 BEF
70 BDT = 23.838 BEF
75 BDT = 25.5407 BEF
80 BDT = 27.2434 BEF
85 BDT = 28.9461 BEF
90 BDT = 30.6488 BEF
95 BDT = 32.3515 BEF
100 BDT = 34.0542 BEF
105 BDT = 35.757 BEF
110 BDT = 37.4597 BEF
115 BDT = 39.1624 BEF
120 BDT = 40.8651 BEF
125 BDT = 42.5678 BEF
130 BDT = 44.2705 BEF
135 BDT = 45.9732 BEF
140 BDT = 47.6759 BEF
145 BDT = 49.3787 BEF
150 BDT = 51.0814 BEF
155 BDT = 52.7841 BEF
160 BDT = 54.4868 BEF
165 BDT = 56.1895 BEF
170 BDT = 57.8922 BEF
175 BDT = 59.5949 BEF
180 BDT = 61.2976 BEF
185 BDT = 63.0004 BEF
190 BDT = 64.7031 BEF
195 BDT = 66.4058 BEF
200 BDT = 68.1085 BEF
205 BDT = 69.8112 BEF
210 BDT = 71.5139 BEF
215 BDT = 73.2166 BEF
220 BDT = 74.9193 BEF
225 BDT = 76.6221 BEF
230 BDT = 78.3248 BEF
235 BDT = 80.0275 BEF
240 BDT = 81.7302 BEF
245 BDT = 83.4329 BEF
250 BDT = 85.1356 BEF
255 BDT = 86.8383 BEF
260 BDT = 88.541 BEF
265 BDT = 90.2438 BEF
270 BDT = 91.9465 BEF
275 BDT = 93.6492 BEF
280 BDT = 95.3519 BEF
285 BDT = 97.0546 BEF
290 BDT = 98.7573 BEF
295 BDT = 100.46 BEF
300 BDT = 102.1627 BEF
305 BDT = 103.8655 BEF
310 BDT = 105.5682 BEF
315 BDT = 107.2709 BEF
320 BDT = 108.9736 BEF
325 BDT = 110.6763 BEF
330 BDT = 112.379 BEF
335 BDT = 114.0817 BEF
340 BDT = 115.7844 BEF
345 BDT = 117.4872 BEF
350 BDT = 119.1899 BEF
355 BDT = 120.8926 BEF
360 BDT = 122.5953 BEF
365 BDT = 124.298 BEF
370 BDT = 126.0007 BEF
375 BDT = 127.7034 BEF
380 BDT = 129.4061 BEF
385 BDT = 131.1089 BEF
390 BDT = 132.8116 BEF
395 BDT = 134.5143 BEF
400 BDT = 136.217 BEF
405 BDT = 137.9197 BEF
410 BDT = 139.6224 BEF
415 BDT = 141.3251 BEF
420 BDT = 143.0278 BEF
425 BDT = 144.7306 BEF
430 BDT = 146.4333 BEF
435 BDT = 148.136 BEF
440 BDT = 149.8387 BEF
445 BDT = 151.5414 BEF
450 BDT = 153.2441 BEF
455 BDT = 154.9468 BEF
460 BDT = 156.6495 BEF
465 BDT = 158.3523 BEF
470 BDT = 160.055 BEF
475 BDT = 161.7577 BEF
480 BDT = 163.4604 BEF
485 BDT = 165.1631 BEF
490 BDT = 166.8658 BEF
495 BDT = 168.5685 BEF
500 BDT = 170.2712 BEF

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Filed Under: BEF Tagged With: Bangladeshi Takas, Bangladeshi Takas to Belgian Francs, BEF to BDT calculator, Belgian Francs, How to Convert 1 BEF to BDT Bangladeshi Taka

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