-
pound was
adopted in 1952. The
Israeli pound was
subdivided into 1,000
prutot. The
Israeli pound retained the
Palestine pound's
sterling peg. In August...
-
Pruta (Hebrew: פרוטה, plural:
prutot) was a
denomination of
currency in
Israel before 1960. The
pruta was
introduced shortly after the
establishment of...
- and in 1960, the sub-division of the
Israeli pound was
changed from 1,000
prutot to 100 agorot.
Because lira (Hebrew: לִירָה) was a
loanword from Latin,...
-
Israel with low value. A loaf of
bread in
ancient times was
worth about 10
prutot (plural of prutah). One
prutah was also
worth two
lepta (singular lepton)...
- years. The
brigade commander was
sentenced to pay the
symbolic fine of 10
prutot (old
Israeli cents). The
Israeli court found that the
command to kill civilians...
- 2024-05-26.
Retrieved 2025-04-27. "Coins from the
Herodian Dynasty". "2
Prutot -
Herod Archelaus, Judea". Krause,
Chester L.;
Clifford Mishler (1991)....
- have
issued such coins, all
minted in Jerusalem. All
issues minted were
prutot,
small bronze coins averaging 2-2.5 grams,
similar to the
Roman quadrans...
-
Hebrew Yochanan Hyrc****;
reigned 134–104 BCE,
until his death).
Minted prutot that said:
Yehochanan the High
Priest and
council of the Jews (Sanhedrin)...
- Name (Hebrew)
Description Non-Jewish
equivalent Weight Notes Prutah (pl.
prutot) פרוטה
Copper coin 22 mg (0.34 troy grains)
Issar (pl. issarim)
Roman copper...
-
Coins 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 25, 50, 100 mils, 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 250, 500
prutot Demographics Replaced Egyptian pound (Mandatory Palestine)
Replaced by Jordanian...