The
Lebanese pound (
sign:
£ or L
£;
Arabic:
lira;
French:
livre;
ISO 4217:
LBP) is the currency unit of
Lebanon. It is divided into 100
piastres but
inflation has eliminated the subdivisions.
The
plural form of lira, as used on the currency, is either
lirat (ليرات) or the same, whilst there are four forms for qirsh: the dual
qirshan (قرشان), the plural
qirush (قروش) used with numbers 3-10, the accusative singular
qirsha (قرشا) used with 11-99, or the genitive singular
qirshi (قرش) used with multiples of 100. In both cases, the number determines which plural form is used. Note that before the
Second World War, the Arabic spelling of the subdivision was غرش (
girsh). All of Lebanon's coins and banknotes are bilingual in Arabic and French.
History
Before
World War 1, the
Ottoman lira was used. After the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the currency became the
Egyptian pound in 1918. Upon gaining control of
Syria and Lebanon, the
French replaced the Egyptian pound with a new currency for Syria and Lebanon, the
Syrian pound, which was linked to the
French franc at a value of 1 pound = 20 francs. Lebanon issued its own coins from 1924 and banknotes from 1925. In 1939, the Lebanese currency was officially separated from that of Syria, though it was still linked to the French franc and remained interchangeable with Syrian money. In 1941, following France's defeat by
Nazi Germany, the currency was linked instead to the British
pound sterling at a rate of 8.83...
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