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| 背面描述 | The reverse features the denomination expressed in both Arabic-Indic and Western numerals. The legend 'مائة هللة' (One Hundred Halalah) appears in the upper field in bold calligraphic script, flanked by the Arabic-Indic numeral '١٠٠' to the right and the Western numeral '100' to the left. At centre, a circular cartouche encloses the Arabic inscription 'ريال واحد' (One Riyal) in stylised calligraphy. The Hijri year '١٤٠٨' appears prominently in the lower field in Arabic-Indic numerals. |
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| 铸币厂 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 铸造量 | 1408 (1988) - ١٤٠٨ - 40,000,000 1408 (1988) - ١٤٠٨ Mint Sets (KM#MS1) - 1408 (1988) - ١٤٠٨ Proof Sets only (KM#PS1) - 5,000 1414 (1994) - ١٤١٤ - 5,000 |
| 附加信息 |
Saudi Arabia's coinage during the Fahd era reflected the kingdom's post-oil-boom recalibration — the late 1980s saw Riyadh managing the fiscal consequences of the 1986 oil price collapse, which had cut export revenues by more than half within a single year. SAMA's monetary operations during this window were oriented heavily toward defending the riyal's dollar peg, a commitment that has held without interruption since 1986.
The Halalah subdivision, introduced in the decimal reform of the 1960s, had by this period become largely irrelevant in daily transactions due to inflation eroding small-denomination utility — making the dual denomination inscription on this piece something of an anachronism by the time it circulated.