No, the Chinese invented paper money during the Song dynasty and also had a credit system called "flying money" during the Tang dynasty. The Romans invented gold coins.
City-states minted their own.
The Ancient Egyptians didn't use currency; they bartered. The Greeks introduced currency to Egypt.
The Currency Act prohibited the issue of any new bills and the reissue of existing currency
The act prohibited the issue of any new bills and the reissue of existing currency.
Yes. They used Drachmas which were used until 1st January 20021 Drachma = £0.00238860962
Romans and Greeks use papyrus to write on.
Greeks replaced their own money system of drachmas in 2001 and now use euros. Note that most countries DON'T use any form of dollars as their currency, so the strictly pedantic answer would be "Greece doesn't use dollar bills at all".
Texas uses dollar bills as their currency.
The ten, the 100 dollar bills.
Coins and paper bills used as money are called currency.
Golden drachmas
Yes, in one of its senses. Currency can mean the monetary units (coins and bills) in use in a country. It can also mean the fact of being in common and present use. (e.g. The currency of his opinion is that he has all the facts.)
1,2,5,10,20,50,100,200,500,1000,2000,5000,
Drachmas.
The currency of Ohio is the United States dollar.
American currency is not legal tender in Canada. Many (but not all) taxi drivers will accept American bills at par. You would be wise to convert to Canadian currency. Canadian banks will exchange American bills for Canadian bills at a fair exchange rate, and will do so while you wait. Besides, our bills are prettier than American bills.
The answer depends on which country's dollars. There are many countries that use "dollars" as their currency unit and their bills, or notes, are of different values.
Andrew Jackson has appeared on all of the following U.S. currency bills...$5, $10, $20, $50, $1000 (Confederacy), and $10,000 bills.