Once upon a time you could spend them in Greece. However drachmas are no use now, Greece adopted the Euro in 2002. The lepta is now one hundredth of a Euro.
I would give it to somebody who is living on the street
If you spent 100 EVERY day... it would take more than 27 YEARS !
You could spend a fraction of a penny every second and spend a trillion dollars over a very long time. However to spend a trillion dollars in a certain amount of time it's $(1000000000 / Months * 2678400) per second. So over 5 months it would be about $76.67 per second.
Hours and minutes would be a sensible measure of the amount of time you spend on homework each day.
ten thousand 1,000,000 / 100 = 10,000
Once upon a time you could spend them in Greece. However drachmas are no use now, Greece adopted the Euro in 2002. The lepta is now one hundredth of a Euro.
gold drachmas
Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.Remember that the pay of the Roman soldier varied with the times. However we can get an idea of their pay from a pay record of 83 AD. The men were paid three times a year. The total for this man's pay was 247 drachmas. (This particular unit was paid in drachmas which was comparable to the denarii) Multiply that by three and he would have earned 641 drachmas in pay for a year.
In 2001 397 drachmas would buy one dollar
In which city would you spend a dinar?
I lived in Southern Spain for 10 years. I would like to move back and spend the rest of my life seeing the rest of the country.
If the Japanese didn't come to The Philippines then the country would be more developed because they had to spend a lot of time and money rebuilding the country after the war ended.
It would take a lot of math to calculate a precise answer. The Roman army was not paid weekly, as the Romans had no week as we know it. (The closest thing in ancient Rome to our week was an eight day expanse between market days. )The army was paid every 4 month, according to existing records. An example from the records of the Emperor Domitian is of a soldier getting his stipendum of 247 drachmas. Out of this he had 222 drachmas in deductions, leaving him with 251/2 drachmas. All this for 4 months of work. Don't feel too sorry for him, there were other way for a soldier to add to his income.
It depends on where you would like to go in the world, what continent, what country, what state. You didn't say.The US is still a great country to spend a vacation. Almost all types of vacations are in this country already. But if you want exotic destinations, Africa and Australia are a good bet.
I would rather have a billion dollar sin the US than in England because I could spend the money in my own country and give back to my community.
In Shakespeare's play, Julius Caesar, Julius Caesar leaves 75 drachmas to every citizen of Rome. It's very hard to guess, but according to a history textbook, 75 Roman Drachmas was worth about $254 USD today.
You would need to either have them appraised at a coin shop or take them to a bank in the European Union to convert them to euro before calculating their value.Then you can use this currency converter to calculate it.