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The design of the Israeli 10 agorot coin has been a significant subject of controversy in the Middle East. Some Palestinians, including former Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, claimed that the obverse design of this coin incorporates a map of a "Greater Israel" that "goes from the Mediterranean to Mesopotamia, from the Red Sea to the Euphrates", and thus reflects Zionist expansionism. Israel denies this, maintaining that the 10 agorot design was selected for historical value, and "was closely patterned after a coin issued in 37–40 B.C.E., during the Roman siege of Jerusalem, by Mattathias Antigonus II, the last Hasmonaean King". *

The design first appeared on the 100 (old) Sheqalim coin which was issued by the Bank of Israel on May 2, 1984 *. When the Sheqel currency was replaced by the New Sheqel (September 1985) the design was copied to the new 10 Agorot coin, which was equal in value to the old 100 Sheqalim coin. This design was also adopted as the symbol of the Bank of Israel.

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Controversies

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "10 Agorot controversy".

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