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The rand is the currency of South Africa. It takes its name
from the Witwatersrand (White-waters-ridge in Afrikaans),
the ridge upon which Johannesburg is built and where most
of South Africa's gold deposits were found. It was first introduced
in 1961, coinciding with the establishment of the Republic
of South Africa. It replaced the South African pound as legal
tender, at the rate of two rand per pound or ten shillings
to the rand. The rand has the symbol 'R' and is divided into
100 cents, symbol 'c', and is available in denominations of
five notes (R10, R20, R50, R100 and R200) and seven coins
(5c, 10c, 20c, 50c, R1, R2 and R5). One and two cent coins
were also available until their discontinuation in April 2002,
primarily due to inflation devalueing them. All prices are
now rounded to the nearest 5c and the coins are no longer
in circulation.

50 rand

New 5 rand (2004)
The first series of rand banknotes bore the image of Jan
van Riebeeck, the first V.O.C. administrator of Cape Town.
In the 1990s, the notes were redesigned with images of the
Big Five wildlife species. The new notes and coins are also
printed in all eleven official languages of South Africa.
In an effort to curb counterfeiting, a new R5 coin was released
in August 2004 as well as new banknotes in February 2005.
Security features introduced on the coin include a bi-metal
design (similar to the €1 and €2 coins, the British
£2 coin and the Canadian $2 coin), a specially-serrated
security groove along the rim and micro-lettering. The new
notes also feature a number of new security features.

New Rand notes series
The rand is the currency of the Common Monetary Area between
South Africa, Namibia, Swaziland and Lesotho.

The old and new R5 coins
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