Franks
Before the Euro, the French used the French franc. It was phased out in 2001.
Before the euro was introduced, Andorra used French francs and Spanish pesetas. It did not have currency of its own (and still doesn't.)
Prior to the adoption of the Euro, the historical currency of France was the franc.
The French currency before 2002 was the French franc. Since then it is the Euro.
The currency of all parts of France is the Euro. This includes French Guiana.
The currency in French Polynesia is Franc and its code is XPF
Before the Euro was introduced in Europe, the French currency was measured in Francs.
The currency of France before 2002 was the French Franc. The franc was abolished in 2002 and replaced by the Euro at the rate of €1 = 6.55957 francs. The subdivision of the franc was the centime, 1 franc = 100 centimes. The name 'centime' is also used in French for the subdivision of the Euro, €1 = 100 centimes.
The French currency in the 18th century was the franc. Some coins were named by old names like the Louis (the largest coin).
The French currency before 2001 was the French franc (FF). It was phased out in 2001.
The currency in France used to be the franc. The currency has since changed, and France now uses the euro.
Old paper and coin currency can be sold to currency dealers. Old currency can also be sold online on the website, Ebay.