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The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.The answer to your question can only be "it depends". The value of a coin depends on its condition, its metal, and its rarity. A grubby old coin with worn engraving would be worth much less than a silver or gold coin with sharp images and engraving. There is no average price for, say, a denarius, because all of them are in various stages of deterioration.
The value of a coin in 200 BC would depend on its denomination, such as an as, denarius, etc. just as our coins today depend on their denominations, such as a penny, dime, quarter, etc. If you mean how much the coin would be worth today, it would depend on its condition and rarity.
No newspapers were published in Ancient Rome.
A denarius was a Roman silver coin containing about 3 grams or 3.9 grams of pure silver. It's difficult to give its present day worth because its value would depend on the price of silver today. To find an exact answer, you would have to check the precious metal prices in the financial pages of your daily newspaper.
35-40 cent
The denarius was used in roman times as a daily salary. It was worth twenty dollars.
assuming its late roman empire then 1 denarii is about 4 times the value of a sestertius and a sestertius being worth about $5 in today's money a denarius would be about $20 got my info from https://sites.google.com/a/saintmarksschool.org/grade7rome/roman-money/what-can-i-buy-with-a-denarius so cant be sure its correct but its the only website I've seen with any info other than wikipedia
Your question cannot be answered completely because ancient Rome had no coin comparable to our dollar. Remember too, that the Roman coins were of pure metals. For example a denarius had 3 grams of pure silver and would be worth about $300 dollars today. This was one day's pay for an unskilled worker and it certainly was not valued as we would value it today. Using the denarius as a marker, a thousand dollars would be worth 3 denarii and 5 1/2 asses, or thereabouts depending on the price of silver at present. But remember, this is in present day values, the ancients had much lower values for their coins.
NFL player Denarius Moore weighs 190 pounds.
How much ancient coins are worth depends on where they are from and in what condition they are. It also depends on how rare they are.
2000 Chinese dollars
A silver denarius during the first century was worth about $21 of bread, so 25 silver denarii probably would be about $525.
$100.00.
In Luke 10:35 the good samaritan paid the inn keeper with two denarii. A denarius (Greek) was a small silver being the equivalent of a full day's wage. The Bible refers to the denarius as a day's wage for a common laborer (Matthew 20:2). Classical historians regularly say that in the late Roman Republic and early Roman Empire the daily wage for an unskilled laborer and common soldier was 1 denarius without tax, or about US$20 in bread. By this estimate 100 denarii is about $2000 USD in modern times.
In ancient times because there was not much metals discovered they had to use titanium for poo.
- For The Roman denarius see the link.- For the Italian denaro (unit of mass): 1 Italian denaro = 1,10-1,25 g = 0,00242-0,00275 pounds
20 bucks