This serie of banknotes belongs to the period under Tito's
leadership, in which he accepted America economic help (Marshall Plan,
unlike other communist countries), broke up with Stalin's USSR and created the
Non-Aligned Movement in 1961.
There are banknotes of 100 Yugoslav dinara, 500 Yugoslav dinara, 1,000 Yugoslav dinara and 5,000
Yugoslav dinara.
On the other side of the banknote, it can be seen Dubrovnik, a coastal city on the Adriatic Sea (the Croatian part of it) which is a World Heritage Site. Moreover it has six 100's, the name of the regions of Yugoslavia and the official name of the country in Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and Macedonian, plus the written value in those languages. In the lower part there's a text saying that counterfeiting is punished by law. This banknote has no digital watermark. The size of this banknote is 12.6 cm x 6 cm.
100 Yugoslav dinara (сто динара/sto dinara/sto dinarjev/сто динари)
This banknote worth 100 dinara was first circulated in May the 1st of 1955. On the main side left it can be seen a woman with the Croatian coast in the background. In the center there is a 100, the value of the banknote written in Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and Macedonian, the official the name of the country (Federativne Narodne Republike Jugoslavije) and the National Bank in Croatian (Narodna banka). In corners there are four 100's and the rest of the banknote is fulled with decorative elements.On the other side of the banknote, it can be seen Dubrovnik, a coastal city on the Adriatic Sea (the Croatian part of it) which is a World Heritage Site. Moreover it has six 100's, the name of the regions of Yugoslavia and the official name of the country in Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and Macedonian, plus the written value in those languages. In the lower part there's a text saying that counterfeiting is punished by law. This banknote has no digital watermark. The size of this banknote is 12.6 cm x 6 cm.
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