in us dollars 1$ (one dollar) is worth one drachma so the dollar and drachma are the sane amount of valubilaty (how much it is worth)
A drachma was worth a day's wages for an unskilled laborer. It is not a 1:1 ratio.
1 Drachma was a day's wage for a unskilled laborer in the time of Jesus. One hundred drachma was equal to 1 mina. Converting it to modern wages is difficult, but a range of about US$5,000 to US$10,000 is reasonable.
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 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
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"
You take a crab in the bath tub and smear it on your face
It depends on what kind of drachma you have, but if it is a 10, 50, 100, or 500 drachma, virtually nothing.
Drachma used to be the currency in Greece, but they've switched to the Euro. Unless it's really old and/or in mint condition I don't think it's worth anything much.
its worth nothing... Greece now use the Euro!
Yes. They're worth one dollar each in Canada.
In ancient Greece it would be about 1 dollar.
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.
There is no such currency any more - the Drachma was replaced by the Euro in 2001 !
The Greek currency is the Drachma of 100 Lepta. There are no Greek Shillings.
Yes. The name 'obol' was used to describe a coin that was one-sixth of a drachma in 450BC.
if you mean the modern currency that Greece used before the euro, it was 340,75 drachmas = 1 euro
The 1930 coin is worth approximately $150. The exact price that one will get for the coin will depend upon the condition of the coin.
Greece has been in a period of economic depression for several years. Thus, its money doesn't have a lot of value compared to U.S. dollars. The current exchange is .004 (or less than a half a penny) for 1 drachma.