The Banaue Rice Terraces, Manunggul Jar cover and Langgal, representing the three islands of the Philippines (Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, respectively)
because it is part of our philippine history
P450.94
Without seeing your coin it's not possible to say for sure. However, if it is a standard circulation coin its value is very small. Inflation caused Mexico's currency to become nearly worthless by the late 1980s. In 1993, all existing pesos were replaced by the "nuevo peso" (new peso) at an exchange rate of 1000 to 1. The new peso is currently worth around 11¢ U.S. so one old peso would be one one-thousandth of that, or $0.00011.
Since 2002 Portugal's money is the Euro. Before it was the Portuguese escudo (PTE), which was originally divided into 1000 réis but later into 100 centavos.Portugual = Euro (€)Brazil = Real (R$)
I assume this is a Mexican coin minted before 1993. If that's the case, it's denominated in what are called "old pesos" which were converted to new pesos at the rate of 1000 old = 1 new. The current exchange rate is about 10 U.S. cents to the peso, so your coin is worth about a dime.
Peso Argentino
Vietnamese Dong ₫1000 = Philippine Pesos ₱2.01Vietnamese Dong ₫1 = Philippine Peso ₱0.00201 ₫1000 x ₱0.00201/ ₫1= ₱2.01
1000 rp : 4.4509 PHP (phillipines peso) 1000 rp : 1.3087 MXN (Mexican peso)
1000 peso is worth $80.60 USD
12.73 Peso.
The main differences between the old 20 peso bill and the new 20 peso bill are the design and security features. The old bill featured the image of Benito JuΓ‘rez, while the new bill features Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla. Additionally, the new bill includes updated security features to prevent counterfeiting.
Well, 100 (Mexican) peso bill would be worth... 100 Mexican pesos (which is the currency they use in Mexico!) assuming it was after 1993, if the bill was before 1993 it would be worth 1/10th of a Mexican peso (since the New Peso was introduced in 1993 which 1 new peso is equal to 1000 old pesos)
To control inflation, during 1992-93 Mexico replaced its peso with a "nuevo peso" (new peso) at the rate of 1000-1. Thus your old bill is only worth 2 new pesos or about 20 cents.
14 cents
1000 mile livres convert to Philippines peso
1 peso equals about 0.065193 US dollars. So a 1000 peso coin would be worth about 65 dollars.
Due to inflation the Mexican peso became almost worthless. Small purchases were costing hundreds of peso. Instead of making 1000 peso coins and printing million peso bills, the new peso was introduced with a value of 1000 old peso.
Benito Juarezis is on the Mexican 20 peso bill