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1 ZMK to BEF Belgian Franc

December 20, 2022 by pkr_to_usd_786

1 ZMK to BEF Belgian Franc
Zambia Kwacha , The Kwacha (ISO 4217 code: ZMW) is the currency of Zambia. It is subdivided into 100 Ngwee. Etymology The name kwacha derives from the Ny … >>> Find out more from wikipedia. category >>> ZMK

1 ZMK to BEF Belgian Franc

1 Zambian Kwacha ( ZMK ) = 0.0018058996670404 Belgian Franc (BEF)


1 ZMK = 0.0018058996670404 BEF


1 BEF = 553.74061928858 ZMK


Amount :

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1 Zambian Kwacha ( ZMK ) Is equal to 0.0018058996670404 Belgian Franc (BEF)
Zambia Kwacha
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Zambian Kwacha
Zambia Kwacha , The Kwacha (ISO 4217 code: ZMW) is the currency of Zambia. It is subdivided into 100 Ngwee. Etymology The name kwacha derives from the Nyanja, Bemba, and Tonga language word for "dawn", alluding to the Zambian nationalist slogan of a "new dawn of freedom". The name ngwee translates as "bright" in the Nyanja language. History Prior to independence in 1964, the Rhodesia and Nyasaland pound was the legal tender of the short-lived British protectorate of Northern Rhodesia. Banknotes of 10 shillings, 1, 5, and 10 pounds issued by the Central Africa Currency Board were in circulation, together with coins of 1⁄2, 1, 3, 6 pence, and 1, 2, 2+1⁄2, and 5 shillings. After independence, the Bank of Zambia issued the first Zambian currency, the Zambian pound, in 1964. The issued paper bills and coins were of similar denominations as these used before independence, except for the 10 pounds note, which was never issued by the Bank of Zambia. A new design to depict the newly independent country's history and struggle was adopted. The two currencies – the Rhodesia and Nyasaland pound and the Zambian pound, were allowed to circulate in parallel until December 15, 1965, when the South Rhodesian pound bills and coins were withdrawn from circulation, except for the 3 pence coin which was allowed to circulate alongside its Zambian alternative for a brief period. On July 1, 1966, the parliament approved the arrangements of the decimal currency system (Act 40 of 1966), changing the main currency unit to Kwacha, with one kwacha being equal to 100 ngwee. The exchange rate was set to one kwacha equivalent to ten Zambian shillings, or one half of a Zambian pound. Thus, by January 16, 1968, all Zambian pound notes and coins were removed from circulation and replaced by the new kwacha notes, and ngwee coins. The Zambian pound notes of 10 shillings, 1, and 5 pounds were changed into 1, 2 and 10 kwacha respectively, a note of 50 ngwee was issued to replace the old 5 shillings coin, alongside a new note of 20 kwacha. Ngwee coins with the denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 ngwee replacing the existing 1, 3, 6 pence, 1, and 2 shillings coins respectively. The Zambian pound notes, and coins ceased to be a legal tender on January 31, 1974. At the very beginning, the kwacha was pegged to the pound sterling at a fixed rate of 1.7094 kwacha per 1 pound. Yet, after the devaluation of the US dollar on August 15, 1971, Zambia broke all its currency's ties to the British monetary unit, and pegged the kwacha to the American monetary unit. These reforms resulted in a reduction of the kwacha's gold standard by 7.8%. A few months later, the British Chancellor of the Exchequer Anthony Barber, announced the demise of the Sterling area, and flotation of the sterling pound, causing Zambia to renounce the monetary privileges once enjoyed as a member state. Throughout the years, the Zambian currency suffered high rates of inflation forcing the Bank of Zambia to introduce high value denominations in 2003, including 20,000 and 50,000 kwacha bills to facilitate transactions. In 2013, a new, redenominated kwacha was introduced. The value of Zambian currency has continued to fall since redenomination; the exchange rate was 22 kwacha to one U.S. dollar in April 2021. After the 2021 Zambian general election saw a defeat for Edgar Lungu, the currency's depreciation was reversed; as of 27 August 2021 one U.S. dollar was exchanged for about 16 kwacha. Find out more from wikipedia
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

Convertion Chart ZMK to BEF

BEF ZMK Belgian Franc BEF
5 ZMK = 0.009 BEF
10 ZMK = 0.0181 BEF
15 ZMK = 0.0271 BEF
20 ZMK = 0.0361 BEF
25 ZMK = 0.0451 BEF
30 ZMK = 0.0542 BEF
35 ZMK = 0.0632 BEF
40 ZMK = 0.0722 BEF
45 ZMK = 0.0813 BEF
50 ZMK = 0.0903 BEF
55 ZMK = 0.0993 BEF
60 ZMK = 0.1084 BEF
65 ZMK = 0.1174 BEF
70 ZMK = 0.1264 BEF
75 ZMK = 0.1354 BEF
80 ZMK = 0.1445 BEF
85 ZMK = 0.1535 BEF
90 ZMK = 0.1625 BEF
95 ZMK = 0.1716 BEF
100 ZMK = 0.1806 BEF
105 ZMK = 0.1896 BEF
110 ZMK = 0.1986 BEF
115 ZMK = 0.2077 BEF
120 ZMK = 0.2167 BEF
125 ZMK = 0.2257 BEF
130 ZMK = 0.2348 BEF
135 ZMK = 0.2438 BEF
140 ZMK = 0.2528 BEF
145 ZMK = 0.2619 BEF
150 ZMK = 0.2709 BEF
155 ZMK = 0.2799 BEF
160 ZMK = 0.2889 BEF
165 ZMK = 0.298 BEF
170 ZMK = 0.307 BEF
175 ZMK = 0.316 BEF
180 ZMK = 0.3251 BEF
185 ZMK = 0.3341 BEF
190 ZMK = 0.3431 BEF
195 ZMK = 0.3522 BEF
200 ZMK = 0.3612 BEF
205 ZMK = 0.3702 BEF
210 ZMK = 0.3792 BEF
215 ZMK = 0.3883 BEF
220 ZMK = 0.3973 BEF
225 ZMK = 0.4063 BEF
230 ZMK = 0.4154 BEF
235 ZMK = 0.4244 BEF
240 ZMK = 0.4334 BEF
245 ZMK = 0.4424 BEF
250 ZMK = 0.4515 BEF
255 ZMK = 0.4605 BEF
260 ZMK = 0.4695 BEF
265 ZMK = 0.4786 BEF
270 ZMK = 0.4876 BEF
275 ZMK = 0.4966 BEF
280 ZMK = 0.5057 BEF
285 ZMK = 0.5147 BEF
290 ZMK = 0.5237 BEF
295 ZMK = 0.5327 BEF
300 ZMK = 0.5418 BEF
305 ZMK = 0.5508 BEF
310 ZMK = 0.5598 BEF
315 ZMK = 0.5689 BEF
320 ZMK = 0.5779 BEF
325 ZMK = 0.5869 BEF
330 ZMK = 0.5959 BEF
335 ZMK = 0.605 BEF
340 ZMK = 0.614 BEF
345 ZMK = 0.623 BEF
350 ZMK = 0.6321 BEF
355 ZMK = 0.6411 BEF
360 ZMK = 0.6501 BEF
365 ZMK = 0.6592 BEF
370 ZMK = 0.6682 BEF
375 ZMK = 0.6772 BEF
380 ZMK = 0.6862 BEF
385 ZMK = 0.6953 BEF
390 ZMK = 0.7043 BEF
395 ZMK = 0.7133 BEF
400 ZMK = 0.7224 BEF
405 ZMK = 0.7314 BEF
410 ZMK = 0.7404 BEF
415 ZMK = 0.7494 BEF
420 ZMK = 0.7585 BEF
425 ZMK = 0.7675 BEF
430 ZMK = 0.7765 BEF
435 ZMK = 0.7856 BEF
440 ZMK = 0.7946 BEF
445 ZMK = 0.8036 BEF
450 ZMK = 0.8127 BEF
455 ZMK = 0.8217 BEF
460 ZMK = 0.8307 BEF
465 ZMK = 0.8397 BEF
470 ZMK = 0.8488 BEF
475 ZMK = 0.8578 BEF
480 ZMK = 0.8668 BEF
485 ZMK = 0.8759 BEF
490 ZMK = 0.8849 BEF
495 ZMK = 0.8939 BEF
500 ZMK = 0.9029 BEF

Convertion Chart BEF to ZMK

Belgian Franc Belgian Franc ZMK ZMK
5 BEF = 2768.7031 ZMK
10 BEF = 5537.4062 ZMK
15 BEF = 8306.1093 ZMK
20 BEF = 11074.8124 ZMK
25 BEF = 13843.5155 ZMK
30 BEF = 16612.2186 ZMK
35 BEF = 19380.9217 ZMK
40 BEF = 22149.6248 ZMK
45 BEF = 24918.3279 ZMK
50 BEF = 27687.031 ZMK
55 BEF = 30455.7341 ZMK
60 BEF = 33224.4372 ZMK
65 BEF = 35993.1403 ZMK
70 BEF = 38761.8434 ZMK
75 BEF = 41530.5464 ZMK
80 BEF = 44299.2495 ZMK
85 BEF = 47067.9526 ZMK
90 BEF = 49836.6557 ZMK
95 BEF = 52605.3588 ZMK
100 BEF = 55374.0619 ZMK
105 BEF = 58142.765 ZMK
110 BEF = 60911.4681 ZMK
115 BEF = 63680.1712 ZMK
120 BEF = 66448.8743 ZMK
125 BEF = 69217.5774 ZMK
130 BEF = 71986.2805 ZMK
135 BEF = 74754.9836 ZMK
140 BEF = 77523.6867 ZMK
145 BEF = 80292.3898 ZMK
150 BEF = 83061.0929 ZMK
155 BEF = 85829.796 ZMK
160 BEF = 88598.4991 ZMK
165 BEF = 91367.2022 ZMK
170 BEF = 94135.9053 ZMK
175 BEF = 96904.6084 ZMK
180 BEF = 99673.3115 ZMK
185 BEF = 102442.0146 ZMK
190 BEF = 105210.7177 ZMK
195 BEF = 107979.4208 ZMK
200 BEF = 110748.1239 ZMK
205 BEF = 113516.827 ZMK
210 BEF = 116285.5301 ZMK
215 BEF = 119054.2331 ZMK
220 BEF = 121822.9362 ZMK
225 BEF = 124591.6393 ZMK
230 BEF = 127360.3424 ZMK
235 BEF = 130129.0455 ZMK
240 BEF = 132897.7486 ZMK
245 BEF = 135666.4517 ZMK
250 BEF = 138435.1548 ZMK
255 BEF = 141203.8579 ZMK
260 BEF = 143972.561 ZMK
265 BEF = 146741.2641 ZMK
270 BEF = 149509.9672 ZMK
275 BEF = 152278.6703 ZMK
280 BEF = 155047.3734 ZMK
285 BEF = 157816.0765 ZMK
290 BEF = 160584.7796 ZMK
295 BEF = 163353.4827 ZMK
300 BEF = 166122.1858 ZMK
305 BEF = 168890.8889 ZMK
310 BEF = 171659.592 ZMK
315 BEF = 174428.2951 ZMK
320 BEF = 177196.9982 ZMK
325 BEF = 179965.7013 ZMK
330 BEF = 182734.4044 ZMK
335 BEF = 185503.1075 ZMK
340 BEF = 188271.8106 ZMK
345 BEF = 191040.5137 ZMK
350 BEF = 193809.2168 ZMK
355 BEF = 196577.9198 ZMK
360 BEF = 199346.6229 ZMK
365 BEF = 202115.326 ZMK
370 BEF = 204884.0291 ZMK
375 BEF = 207652.7322 ZMK
380 BEF = 210421.4353 ZMK
385 BEF = 213190.1384 ZMK
390 BEF = 215958.8415 ZMK
395 BEF = 218727.5446 ZMK
400 BEF = 221496.2477 ZMK
405 BEF = 224264.9508 ZMK
410 BEF = 227033.6539 ZMK
415 BEF = 229802.357 ZMK
420 BEF = 232571.0601 ZMK
425 BEF = 235339.7632 ZMK
430 BEF = 238108.4663 ZMK
435 BEF = 240877.1694 ZMK
440 BEF = 243645.8725 ZMK
445 BEF = 246414.5756 ZMK
450 BEF = 249183.2787 ZMK
455 BEF = 251951.9818 ZMK
460 BEF = 254720.6849 ZMK
465 BEF = 257489.388 ZMK
470 BEF = 260258.0911 ZMK
475 BEF = 263026.7942 ZMK
480 BEF = 265795.4973 ZMK
485 BEF = 268564.2004 ZMK
490 BEF = 271332.9035 ZMK
495 BEF = 274101.6065 ZMK
500 BEF = 276870.3096 ZMK

Related posts:

  1. 1 ZMW to BEF Belgian Franc
  2. 1 ZMK to AFN Afghan Afghani
  3. 1 ZMK to AWG Aruban or Dutch Guilder
  4. 1 ZMK to BIF Burundian Franc

Filed Under: ZMK Tagged With: Belgian Francs, Belgian Francs to Zambian Kwacha, How to Convert 1 ZMK to BEF Belgian Franc, Zambian Kwacha, ZMK to BEF calculator

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