RUBLE

5000 Russian rubles issued in 2006

100,000 Belarusian rubles issued in 2005

1 Transnistrian ruble issued in 2000

The 'ruble' or 'rouble' is a unit of currency. It is currently the currency unit of Belarus, Russia, and Transnistria, and was the currency unit of several other countries, notably countries influenced by Russia and the Soviet Union. One ruble is divided into 100 'kopeks' or 'copecks'.

Contents
Etymology
Origin
English spelling
Plurals in Russian
Other languages
List of rubles
Current
Obsolete
References

Etymology


Origin

According to one version, the word "ruble" is derived from the Russian verb ''рубить'', ''rubit'', i.e., to chop. Historically, "ruble" was a piece of a certain weight chopped off a silver ingot (grivna), hence the name.
Another more convincing version is that the name comes from the Russian noun ''рубец'', ''rubets'', i.e., the seam that is left around the coin after casting: silver was added to the cast in two goes. Therefore the word ''ruble'' means "a cast with a seam[1].
It was the Russian equivalent of the mark, a measurement of weight for silver and gold used in medieval western Europe. The weight of one ''ruble'' was equal to the weight of one ''grivna''.
In Russian, a folk name for "ruble", 'tselkovyi' (целковый, wholesome), is known, which is a shortening of the "целковый рубль" ("tselkovyi ruble"), i.e. a wholesome, uncut ruble.
The word ''kopek'', ''kopeck'' or ''copeck'' (''копейка'', ''kopeyka'') derives from the Russian ''kop'yo'' (копьё) – a spear. The first kopek coins, minted at Novgorod and Pskov from about 1535 onwards, show a horseman with a spear. From the 1540s onwards the horseman bears a crown, and doubtless the intention was to represent Ivan the Terrible who was Grand Prince of all Russia until 1547 and Tsar thereafter.
It is worth noting that Russia was the first country in the world to introduce a decimal monetary system (1704) where one ruble was equal to 100 kopeks.
English spelling

Both the spellings "ruble" and "rouble" are used in English. The form "rouble" is preferred by the Oxford English Dictionary, but the earliest use recorded in English is the now completely obsolete "robble". The form "rouble" probably derives from the transliteration into French used among the Tsarist aristocracy. There is some tendency for North American authors to use "ruble" and other English speakers to use "rouble", and also some tendency for older sources to use "rouble" and more recent ones to use "ruble", but neither tendency is absolute. An accurate, but ungainly, English transliteration is ''rubl'.
Plurals in Russian

The Russian plurals that may be seen on the actual currency are modified according to Russian grammar. Numbers 1, 21, 31 etc. will be followed by nominative singular ''рубль'', ''копейка''. Numbers 2-4, 22-24, 32-34 etc. will be followed by genitive singular ''рубля'', ''копейки''. Numbers 5-20, 25-30, 35-40 etc. will be followed by genitive plural ''рублей'', ''копеек''.
Other languages

In several languages spoken in Russia and the former Soviet Union, the currency name has no etymological relation with ''rouble''. Especially in Turkic languages or languages influenced by them, the rouble is often known (also officially) as 'som' or 'sum', (meaning ''pure''), or 'manat' (from Russian ''moneta'', meaning ''coin'').
Soviet banknotes had their value printed in the languages of 15 republics of the Soviet Union.

List of rubles


Current


Belarusian ruble

Russian ruble

Transnistrian ruble
Obsolete

(This list may not contain all historical rubles, especially rubles issued by sub-national entities)

Armenian ruble

Azerbaijani ruble (ruble is the Russian name of the first Azerbaijani manat)

★ Georgian ruble (ruble is the Russian name of the Georgian maneti)

Latvian rublis

Soviet ruble

Tajikistani ruble

Transcaucasian ruble

★ Ukrainian ruble (ruble is the Russian name of the Ukrainian karbovanets)

Tuvan akşa and

References


1. Sergey Khalatov. History of Ruble and Kopek on "Collectors' Portal UUU.RU" (In Russian)

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