Maltese lira was the official currency of Maltabefore the Euro.
the Maltese lira
the Italian era
Guilders or Guldens are the the old currency used in the Netherlands before they went to Euros
it's the old currency (previous than Euros) 1 euro = 6.55957 franc
From 1861 until 2002 the currency of Italy was the Italian Lira.
I think you mean "Lisbon" capital of Portugal where they used pesetas, now they use Euros.
The Euro is currently the legal tender currency in Germany - although many merchants will still accept the old deutsche mark since they can exchange them for euros at German banks. Most major banks will also exchange other currencies - especially American and Canadian Dollars - for euros.
mooola
Before the Euro, Italians used the Lira.
The country of Italy was united in the 1860s, but the idea of 'Italianness' existed long before.
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drachmae as its currency since 2002 when they switched to euros, so any drachma currency you have from that country is obsolete.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.
If you mean Turkish lira... There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira, so your old lira have little money value, just curiosity value. Any remaining old lira has to be converted at either the Turkish Central Bank or T.C. Ziraat Bank branches, at the rate of 1 million old lira = 1 new lira.
Before the euro was introduced, Andorra used French francs and Spanish pesetas. It did not have currency of its own (and still doesn't.)
Old paper and coin currency can be sold to currency dealers. Old currency can also be sold online on the website, Ebay.