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The Greek drachma is an older form of Greek currency. It was replaced with the Euro on January 1, 2002. In today's market 200 Greek drachma are worth $0.78 in United States currency.
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The Greek currency is the Drachma of 100 Lepta. There are no Greek Shillings.
Before Texas was part of the United States it was called the Republic of Texas. During this time the currency was called notes. A 1840 Republic of Texas $500.00 note is not worth anything today.
Nothing ... pre 1997 notes are not legal currency now.
It depends whether the dollar will be kept as the world reserve currency and if oil and commodities are justified in dollars. Otherwise, it is worth less that the Greek currency if they leave the Euro.
Mexican notes issued before 1992 are worth 1/1000th of their face value in current Peso - so a 10,000 Peso note from 1983 is worth about $0.80. Very old notes, especially in mint uncirculated condition are worth more to banknote collectors.
If authentic, it could be extremely valuable. Also, depending on its condition and variety (signature combinations, variants, etc). Send a scan, I appraise for free: support@papermoneysite.us and will buy notes too.
I have a peurvian bill that is for 1000 or mil intis. Is it worth anything?
Greek currency (Ekaton - Greece Drachmae) is no longer in circulation (converted to Euro).
No. It's only a novelty, not genuine currency. It's worth as much as someone is willing to pay.
Greece doesn't use dollars as their currency. The official currency in Greece is the Euro and the current exchange rate is 1.17 Euros to £1 (GBP).