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These older type of Ruble banknotes no longer have a legal tender value. The Bank of Russia no longer exchanges these banknotes for a monetary value. At Leftover Currency we continue to exchange old Russian Ruble banknotes at an exchange rate that covers their collectable value.
Russia does not use cents or dollars, it uses rubles and kopecks. It's more likely that your coins are in rubles because the kopeck is 1/100 of a ruble and has very little value so low-denomination coins are not often used. In any case it's not likely that your coin is worth a huge amount because as of early 2011 the ruble is trading at roughly 3¢ US. If you need a specific please check your coin again for its denomination and post a new question (don't add to this one). The denomination will be in the Cyrillic alphabet: рубль = ruble копе́йк = kopeck
Russia does not use cents or dollars, it uses rubles and kopecks. It's more likely that your coins are in rubles because the kopeck is 1/100 of a ruble and has very little value so low-denomination coins are not often used. In any case it's not likely that your coin is worth a huge amount because as of early 2011 the ruble is trading at roughly 3¢ US. If you need a specific please check your coin again for its denomination and post a new question (don't add to this one). The denomination will be in the Cyrillic alphabet: рубль = ruble копе́йк = kopeck
Russia does not use cents or dollars, it uses rubles and kopecks. It's more likely that your coins are in rubles because the kopeck is 1/100 of a ruble and has very little value so low-denomination coins are not often used. In any case it's not likely that your coin is worth a huge amount because as of early 2011 the ruble is trading at roughly 3¢ US. If you need a specific please check your coin again for its denomination and post a new question (don't add to this one). The denomination will be in the Cyrillic alphabet: рубль = ruble копе́йк = kopeck
No, the Russian currency was revalued in 1998 and new bank notes and coins were issued. Many of the new notes and coins were dated 1997.
Very little. Your coin is from Russia, so its value would be in either kopecks or rubles rather than US cents. Either way, as of mid-2013 the ruble trades at about 3¢, so if it's 10 kopecks it's worth 0.3 US cents; if it's 10 rubles it's worth 30¢. The lettering on the coin is in the Russian alphabet and is actually "Банк Россуии" which translates as Bank of Russia.
If I have read your mis-spelled question properly, you have a 1995 copper/nickel Bank of Russia (БАНК РОССИИ) 20 Ruble (ДВАДЦАТЬ РУБЛЕЙ) coin 24.1 mm in diameter with a double headed eagle on the obverse and soldiers and tanks on the reverse. A Russian 1995 Twenty Ruble (РУБЛь) coin, uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to $3 USD. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Central Bank of Russia was created in 1990.
The Russian Ruble is a round copper-nickel-zinc coin of silvery appearance with a milled edge, a diameter of 20.5 mm and it weighs 3.25 grams. The obverse has the double headed Russian eagle and the words БАНК РОССИИ (BANK OF Russia) around the top and the words ОДИН РУБЛЬ (ONE RUBLE) across the bottom with the year underneath it. The reverse has a big number 1 with the word РУБЛЬ (RUBLE) below it. Starting at about half way up the left hand side, there is stem of a plant that travels across the bottom of the coin and most of the way up the right hand side. See the link for a visual perspective.
ACLEDA Bank was created in 1993.
ABLV Bank was created in 1993.
MDM Bank was created in 1993.