CCCP is USSR written in the Cyrillic alphabet. I do not think there is any value to them. I was given a handful by a Russian friend and was told, "No country, no value".
CCCP is USSR written in the Cyrillic alphabet. The coin is a 15 Kopek. Копек in Cyrillic. I do not think there is any value to them. I was given a handful by a Russian friend and was told, "No country, no value".
I have inherited my dads money during WWII one of the pieces is a CCCP 5 Koneek 1938 coin. I have several old coins during WWII?
I believe that you are referring to a 1 rouble coin, issued by the Soviet Union (the abbreviation for which, in Russian text, looks like "CCCP") in 1965 commemorating the 20th anniversary of the end of World War II (or, as it was referred to on the coin, the War Against German Fascism). (The coin is identified under Russia as Y#135.1 if you are looking it up in a coin book). About 60 million of such coins were produced, and they circulated as regular coinage. They are worth a couple of dollars in circulated condition.
"CCCP" are the Russian initials for "USSR", and that ex-country used rubles, not dollars. A 1991 1-ruble note was the lowest-value bill at that time and is generally only worth face value, about 20 cents then.
it worth 4 rupels in russia. in America worth cents 20 to dollar.
Take it to a coin dealer.
1941 is a very common date. A circulated coin is worth 2 cents.
You have a 1-ruble coin from the former Soviet Union, but without a date it's not possible to give a value. The lettering is in the Russian Cyrillic alphabet; "CCCP" transliterates to "USSR" using the equivalent English words, and the denomination is actually "рубль" in Cyrillic letters (р = 'r', у = 'u', б = 'b', л = 'l', 'ь' = modifier indicating a soft consonant)
About 2-3 dollars just for the silver. The coin is very common.
No, the coin had no specific meaning.
1941 is a very common date. A circulated coin is worth 2 cents.
"CCCP" isn't a denomination. It's the abbreviation for USSR using the Russian alphabet. The Soviet Union didn't make a 20-ruble coin during the 1980s so presumably your coin is a 20-kopeck piece (spelled "копеек" in the Russian alphabet) and was one of the smaller denominations. It had very little value at the time and has of course been supplanted by the coins of the Russian Republic following the collapse of the Soviet Union.