That is Lepta in Greek. There are 100 Lepta in 1 Drachma.
talent = 60 mina mina = 100 drachma stater = 2 drachma drachma = 6 obols Other coins: Decadrachm = 10 drachma Tetradrachm = 4 drachma Didrachm = stater = 2 drachma
The Greek currency is the Drachma of 100 Lepta. There are no Greek Shillings.
About 10 cents
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"
30 drachmas
the drachma was an ancient Greek coin. Now, the Euro is used as Greek currency.
The value of 5,000,000 Greek drachmas depends on the conversion rate to a modern currency, as Greece adopted the euro in 2002, replacing the drachma. At the time of the transition, the exchange rate was approximately 340.75 drachmas to 1 euro. Therefore, 5,000,000 drachmas would be roughly equivalent to about 14,700 euros. However, since the drachma is no longer in circulation, its value is primarily of historical interest.
The value of a 50 drachma Greek coin will depend on the design, date and condition.
The Greek 100 Drachmai note (Apaxmai Ekaton) from 1978 or later is worth about $2.50 in mint uncirculated condition and face value in any used condition - although superseded by the Euro in 2001, old notes can still be exchanged in Greek banks - about $0.40.
the currency in ancientGreece was talent,mina,stater,drachma and obulusThe Greek currency was made up mainly of the talent, mina, stater, drachma and obulus. Here is the relationship. 1 talent 60 mina 1 mina 100 drachma 1 stater 2 drachma 1 drachma 6 obolus
I'm assuming that apaxme is another way (perhaps Spanish?) to refer to the Greek Drachma: ελληνική δραχμή. Pardon me if I am mistaken. On January 1 2002, the cash drachma was replaced by the Euro. One drachma equalled 340.75 Euros.