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Any One Here Collect Russian Coins And Bills?

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Pillar of the Community
stampvirgin's Avatar
United States
1247 Posts
 Posted 10/08/2010  6:16 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add stampvirgin to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
25 are - 1961
5000 are - 1995
10 are - 1961
1000 are 1993
100 are -1993


coins-
10r -1993
10 centu latvia? - 1997
5 santimi - latvia?
50- py something1993
10 - py? - 1991
20 -py? - 1992
latvia - 1 lats 1992


so I am interested if they are worth more then the paper/metal they are printed on..

Not interested in selling..

I am from the stamp side of this community and know diddly about money.

thanks!
Pillar of the Community
Thailand
1509 Posts
 Posted 10/08/2010  10:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thai-vic to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The notes:
10 Rubles 1961: VG 0.10; VF 0.25; Unc 3.00
25 Rubles 1961: VG 0.50; VF 1.00; Unc 4.00 (on white paper, worth more if lilac tinted paper)
100 Rubles 1993: VG 0.20; VF 0.50; Unc 2.00
1000 Rubles 1993: VG 0.50; VF 1.00; Unc 8.00
500 Rubles 1995: VG 1.00; VF 2.00; Unc 15.00

The coins:
Latvia 5 Santimi (if it's 1992): VF 0.15; XF 0.45; Unc 1.50
Latvia 1 Lats 1992: Unc 4.00 (no other value given)
Lithuania 10 Centu 1997: XF 0.10; Unc 0.30

As for the Russian ones I'd need pictures to ID them. Lots of varieties from that time. The Py? is indeed the Russian word for Rouble (in Cyrilic).
New Member
Silver Girl's Avatar
United States
42 Posts
 Posted 12/02/2010  12:34 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silver Girl to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I collect Russian coins and paper money, as well. "Py" would be the first two letters in Cyrillic for "Ruble." (P=R and y=oo). The word in Russian for Rubles is "Rublei." Russian "cents" are called kopeks - usually written as KOPEEK on the coin. A "P" in Russian looks like the Greek letter Pi (Greek and Russian share quite a few similarities).
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