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Your 1 Million Drachma Greek inflationary note has very little value -- they were printed like wallpaper -- perhaps a dollar from an interested buyer.
no value .the note is only a commemmorative note
1000000 one coard note
The Greek 100 Drachmai note (Apaxmai Ekaton) from 1978 or later is worth about $2.50 in mint uncirculated condition and face value in any used condition - although superseded by the Euro in 2001, old notes can still be exchanged in Greek banks - about $0.40.
There has never been an official 1,000,000 euro note issued by the European Central Bank (ECB) or the Eurosystem. Any such note being circulated is likely a fake or novelty item and not legal tender for transactions.
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.
1,000.000 dollars
A couple of bucks in a novelty store. The US has never printed a genuine $1 million note, but there are loads of "joke" fantasy bills available.
In what currency? Based on the information I can only say the value in Russian Rubles grand total of 1000 Rubles. For anther currency you must specify Euro, UK Pounds, Yen, Drachma, Lira, Paso, Krone, US Canadian Australian Dollar...
I assume that you are referring to a 5,000,000 Drachmai note from Greece (the first letter, called "delta" in greek, looks a little like an "a" in some fonts). The Greek Drachma is no longer in use, having been supplanted by the Euro in January 2002 at a rate of 340.75 drachma to the euro. My guess is that your note dates to 1941-1944, which was an era of hyper-inflation in Greece (and the only time a bill over 50,000 drachma was issued). In 1944, the drachma was revalued at 50,000,000,000 to 1, and in 1953 again by 1000 to 1. That would mean that your 5,000,000 drachma bill, were it exchangable (and I seriously suspect it was long ago demonetized) would be worth 1/10,000,000 of a 2002 drachma, or about 1/3 of a billionth of a euro (this is effectively zero). As for a value to collectors, that would largely depend on the condition of the bill and the rarity of the particular bill issue in question. *****Not wanting to delete the historical information above, this note books for about $3 in perfect uncirculated condition - so would be an interesting conversation piece to hold onto.
What is the value of the shortest note
Nonexistent. There has never been a 1 million Dollar Federal Reserve Note.