Italian Lire are obsolete and can no longer be converted to U.S. Dollars.
There was 620 italian lire to 1 US dollar in 1963
1216.13 Euros.
As of today (02APR2011), 3100 Euros is worth about 2178 Euros.
24.06 euros.
18,000 lire is 9.3 EU
Lire
As of today, 6,000,000 Italian lire from 1977 would be equivalent to about 3,100 euros. This conversion takes into account inflation and the replacement of the lira with the euro in 2002.
Lire is no longer the currency of Italy. It has been replaced by Euros, so it isn't worth anything. You can't even use it in Italy anymore.
Lire is no longer the currency of Italy. It has been replaced by Euros, so it isn't worth anything. You can't even use it in Italy anymore.
Nothing since the lire doesn't exist any longer. If you can exchange it for Euros it could fetch a few cents, but I don't think much. I was in Italy in that time and the lire was really low in value. I got a good exchange rate for my dollar to lire in that time.
The Italian lira (including the 500 lire note) was replaced by the euro in 2002. Therefore, a 500 lire note is no longer legal tender and has no exchange value. However, as a collectible item, its value would depend on factors such as age, condition, and rarity to collectors.
No, the French franc is no longer in circulation since it was replaced by the euro in 1999. You cannot directly trade French francs for euros as the currency is obsolete. You may exchange any remaining French francs for euros at a bank or currency exchange service that accepts legacy currencies.
No. They use the Turkish lire though tourist areas like Famagusta and Kyrenia take either currency and it is easy to change Sterling, Dollars or Euros.
The Italian is an obsolete currency and is no longer used. Italy uses the euro for its currency. In June of 2014, the 1,000 euros were worth 1361.28 American dollars.
Lire was created in 1975.
It sells for about 20 euros or pounds