the currency in ancientGreece was talent,mina,stater,drachma and obulus
The drachma
Until 2002 they were the Drachma, which consisted of 100 Lepta. Since then Greece has joined the Euro (1 € = 100 cents, although the Greek coins use "Lepta" rather than "Cents"
In 387 BC, the currency used in ancient Greece was primarily called "drachma." The drachma was a silver coin that served as a standard unit of exchange in various city-states. Different regions sometimes had their own versions of the drachma, often featuring distinct designs and weights, but it was widely recognized across the Greek world.
talent = 60 mina mina = 100 drachma stater = 2 drachma drachma = 6 obols Other coins: Decadrachm = 10 drachma Tetradrachm = 4 drachma Didrachm = stater = 2 drachma
About 10 cents
The drachma
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.
the drachma was an ancient Greek coin. Now, the Euro is used as Greek currency.
The currency of Greece before the Euro was the Greek Drachma.On 1st January 2002 the Drachma was replaced by the Euro at the rate of €1 = 340.750 Drachma.
The drachma was a form of Greek currency, so the answer to your question would be Greece.
yes; greek money was called drachma my English teacher told us.
The Greek Drachma.
Greece.The drachma was used by Greece, which now uses the Euro. They switched to the Euro on 1 January 2002.The Drachma (meaning a handful) was the currency of Greece.
Greek drachma, meaning "to grasp." The drachma has been used, in various forms, since ancient times and was replaced by the euro in 2002.
Drachma
The Greek currency is the Drachma of 100 Lepta. There are no Greek Shillings.
The Euro (since 2002) also the Drachma in modern Greece