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The author of the article mentions a 2000-drachmae bill at the time of the euro's introduction, which is patently incorrect, as you can see in the Bank of Greece link he provides. I assume this must have been a simple error on his part, so I edited it out.
I know that the article implies it, but shouldn't it be mentioned that Rome used Drachma too?
As for comparative values, perhaps a mention of a drachma's approximate value as a collector's item would be useful.
collector costs would - though then we get into state of the piece of money. The usual Roman coin was the denarius, though. Polybius is using drachmae to talk about Roman soldiers because he's writing in Greek for a Greek audience. aureus (gold), denarius (silver), sestertius (silver), and then I forget. I think the little money was called a quadrans (copper). --MichaelTinkler
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What about the abbreviation, ₯?-- Sonjaaa 05:02, Aug 18, 2004 (UTC)
Under Modern Drachma it states: "The drachma was subdivided into 100 lepton (λεπτά, singular lepton, λεπτόν)". Since this isn't my area, i will ask here, rather than edit the page, if the correct plural ("lepta") has been avoided for the sake of clarity. If the desire is to link directly to "lepton" then perhaps the link should be on the singular that follows in the bracket: "The drachma was subdivided into 100 lepta (λεπτά, singular lepton, λεπτόν)". Eco ant ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 15:25, 12 August 2009 (UTC).
I'm not really used to the talk pages, and I don't edit much so I'm not sure how to make this look right, but I feel like "Greek King Otto" implies that he was Greek rather than just the ruler of Greece. Would it be worthwhile to clarify? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Darthmenisis ( talk • contribs) 06:49, 29 August 2020 (UTC)
The image : Lepta-coins.jpg (bottom right) should be changed as it contains also the greek 20 cents Euro coin !!! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.15.253.50 ( talk) 23:20, 11 February 2007
It seems to me that the ancient currency and the modern currencies are fundamentally different and deserve their own articles. With the ancient content at "Ancient Greek drachma" and modern content here. Does anyone object? Ingrid 20:57, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
Should I go ahead with the split? Blex areton ( talk) 09:42, 8 September 2012 (UTC)
I have corrected the text on the 100 billion note of 1944 because this is actually 100 million million. Also the conversion (nov 1944) mentioned in the subsequent paragraph may need revising! Heraldica ( talk) 14:52, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
"Value of, Drakma of Antiquity" It states that it is difficult to compare the value of the coins over time. Yet, rationally, as the entire country is STILL a forest of olive-groves, and still sells wine by the glass. Then we have: 1 litre of olive oil in 3,400 BCE = X drakma 1 litre of olive oil the day -before- Euro introduction = X drakma We have unbroken amphorae from back then, so we know their volume of storage, use that if it is too "passe" useing the modern day metric standard of litre. proof equation: i glass of wine = ~1/6 wine bottle (3 glasses each for 2 people) = 'w' Drackma the day before Euro introcution Prove 'w' is the cost of a cup of wine in 3,400 BCE, using deductive logic only. Plot a line on an X-Y graph of time over value. 76.90.226.70 ( talk) 23:37, 27 January 2011 (UTC) 20100-01-27 T15:36 Z-8
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Remove Banknote gallery since banknote images are not allowed, and have already been deleted? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Scratchmarc ( talk • contribs) 13:11, 14 August 2011 (UTC)
Coins in denominations from 50 lepta to 20 drachmae carried a portrait of King Paul (reigned 1947–1964). New coins were introduced in 1966, ranging from 50 lepta to 10 drachmae, depicting King Constantine II (reigned 1964–1974). - something about this isn't very clear...did the coins 'reign' in this time period? I'm going to remove the word reigned now and leave someone else to make sense of it later. Goblins77 ( talk) 03:12, 18 November 2011 (UTC)
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"Six thousand drakma to the talent; one talent is equal to nine years worth of work." Except, 365 x 9 = 3,285. Even without a single day off for vacation, weekends, religious observance, sick days, invasion, etc, they are still seemingly making more than (ancient)GRD1.00/day. Any evidential support on how many work days in one year/month/week, and (yes I know about the variable hours via sundial, problem) roughly how many hours a day, including how much time off for lunch? The numbers don't add up; "one obol will get you into the gym", or "a chonix with chous of wine", "two is a prostitutes fee", and 3 will be jury daily pay which will "feed one person for 16 days, or a family of four for 4". Considering a drakma has six obols in it, and that one drakma was essentially minimum wage (using state mandated Parthenon builders pay per day regardless of Citizen/slave/metic status), and their homes were on average 291 square meters, and making ~2 drakma a day (@6k/9 years of work), they were fraking rich compared to us today! ... Or does the math regarding ancient Greek economy need to be as "OCD fine", as it is with all the Roman crap? 71.165.247.91 ( talk) 23:56, 6 November 2014 (UTC)
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