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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ChervonetsChervonets - Wikipedia

    Chervonets. Chervonets is the traditional Russian name for large foreign and domestic gold coins. The name comes from the Russian term червонное золото ( chervonnoye zoloto ), meaning ' red gold ' (also known as rose gold) – the old name of a high-grade gold type. [1]

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KopeckKopeck - Wikipedia

    The word kopek, kopeck, copeck, or kopeyka (in Russian: копейка, kopeyka) is a diminutive form of the Russian kop'yo (копьё)—a spear [citation needed]. The first kopek coins, minted at Novgorod and Pskov from about 1534 onwards, show a horseman with a spear. From the 1540s on, the horseman bore a crown; doubtless the intention was ...

  3. The Constantine ruble is a rare silver coin of the Russian Empire bearing the profile of Constantine, the brother of emperors Alexander I and Nicholas I. It was prepared to be manufactured at the Saint Petersburg Mint during the brief Interregnum of 1825 but has never been minted in numbers and never circulated in public.

  4. Note that if oldsign=yes is set this template uses Rouble official sign for small display.svg, a serif version of the ruble sign tweaked to render legibly at small point sizes. Otherwise it uses Ruble sign.svg, the official sans-serif version of the symbol. See also. Russian ruble; Template:RUB for the older abbreviation ₽

  5. The ruble (or rouble) is the currency of the Russian Federation. I really do not think footnotes are a very satisfactory answer. Everything else belongs in an infobox (if it is a pure one-off detail, such as the ISO code) or further down the article, if it deserves text explanation.

  6. Azerbaijani ruble. The ruble ( Azerbaijani: rublu, Russian: рублей ), or manat ( Azerbaijani: منات ), was the currency of several state entities on the territory of Azerbaijan in from 1918 to 1923.