The drachma was used by Greece, which now uses the Euro. They switched to the Euro on 1 January 2002.
The Drachma (meaning a handful) was the currency of Greece.
golden drachmas were the currency of the ancient Greek gods.
The drachma was a form of Greek currency, so the answer to your question would be Greece.
Greece used the Drachma before 2002. Since then it uses the Euro.
Greece
Drachma was the former currency of the country European country Greece. The drachma was replaced in 1999 by the Euro.
the drachma was an ancient Greek coin. Now, the Euro is used as Greek currency.
Drachma
Greece used the Drachma before 2002. Since then it uses the Euro.
The drachma was once the currency of Greece but has now been replaced by the euro.
What you're reading as "paxmai" is actually "drachma" spelled in the Greek alphabet, which has different symbols than the alphabet used in English and most other Western languages. Greece has not used drachmae as its currency since 2002 when they switched to euros, so any drachma currency you have from that country is obsolete. A few large banks in the EU still accept old currency in exchange for euros but unless you have a huge amount it would cost more to convert it than you'd get in return.
Greek drachma, meaning "to grasp." The drachma has been used, in various forms, since ancient times and was replaced by the euro in 2002.
the currency in ancientGreece was talent,mina,stater,drachma and obulusThe Greek currency was made up mainly of the talent, mina, stater, drachma and obulus. Here is the relationship. 1 talent 60 mina 1 mina 100 drachma 1 stater 2 drachma 1 drachma 6 obolus
The drachma