The obverse of the Russian 500 Ruble note shows a statue of Tsar Peter the Great (founder of the Russian Navy) at Arkhangelsk. The reverse of the Russian 500 Ruble note shows a view of the Solovetsky Monastery on the White Sea at Arkhangelsk.
The obverse of the Russian 1,000 Ruble note shows a statue of Grand Duke Yaroslav I the Wise and the Yaroslavl Kremlin. The reverse of the Russian 1,000 Ruble note shows a view of the Church of the Precursor at Yaroslavl.
The Russian currency is the Ruble. There are 100 Kopeks in a Ruble. Denominations are - * One Kopek coin * Five Kopek coin * Ten Kopek coin * Fifty Kopek coin * One Ruble coin * Two Ruble coin * Five Ruble coin * Ten Ruble coin * Ten Ruble note * Fifty Ruble note * One Hundred Ruble note * Five Hundred Ruble note * One Thousand Ruble note * Five Thousand Ruble note
The Kopek. There are 100 Kopeks in a Ruble.
3 Rubles.
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...
The dimensions of the current Australian polymer banknotes are as follows - Five Dollar note - 65 x 130mm. Ten Dollar note - 65 x 137mm. Twenty Dollar note - 65 x 144mm. Fifty Dollar note - 65 x 151mm. One Hundred Dollar note - 65 x 158mm.
I think you might be talking about a Belarusian 50 ruble note printed anytime from 1992-2000. In 2000, they printed new ruble notes that didn't have the bear. For many years, Belarus has been talking about using the Russian ruble instead of their own note, but nothing has happened yet.
Ruble, manat for coin to be more exact
The ruble or rouble (Russian: рубль rublʹ, plural рубли rubli; see note on English spelling and Russian plurals with numbers) (code: RUB) is the currency of the Russian Federation and the two partially recognized republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Formerly, the ruble was also the currency of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union before their dissolution. Belarus and Transnistria use currencies with the same name. The ruble is subdivided into 100 kopeks (sometimes transliterated kopecks, or copecks; Russian: копейка, kopéyka; plural: копейки, kopéyki). The ISO 4217 code is RUB or 643; the former code, RUR or 810, refers to the Russian ruble before the 1998 redenomination (1 RUB = 1000 RUR).Currently there is no official symbol for the ruble, though the abbreviation руб. is in wide use. Various symbols have been suggested as possibilities, including "РР" (Cyrillic for "RR"), an "R" with two horizontal strokes across the top (similar to the Philippine peso sign), ₱, a "Р" with one horizontal strike
A USSR (СССР) 1961 One Ruble (РУБЛь) coin, uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to $15 USD. If it has been circulated but still in good condition, it might fetch up to $6 USD. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Russian currency has remain largely unchanged since the 1997 issue after the currency was revalued after the hyper inflation was got under control. The 1, 5, 10 and 50 Kopek coins are just about worthless and there was a proposal to withdraw the 1 and 5 coins in 2008, which has not been done yet. There is a 1, 2, 5 and a 10 Ruble coin. The newly released 10 Ruble coin will replace the note of the same value. There are 10, 50, 100, 500, 1000 and 5000 Ruble notes.
face value: about 3 cents USD as a collectable: $5 to $50 depending on condition and framing
Ben Franklin is featured on the 100 dollar note