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A few years back I got a Russian Ruble bill worth 10,000 rubles, but since I only bought it for a few dollars at a fair in Brazil, I'm unsure about it's authenticity. Is there even a such thing? I haven't been able to find a pic.

2006-12-12 09:31:14 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Travel Europe (Continental) Russia

3 answers

Russian roubles were denominated during money reform in 1998, 1 new rouble = 1000 old roubles. The note you bought is most likely one of the notes that circulated before the reform. I think you can change it in a Russian bank for a new one equalling 10 roubles, which is about 13 ~ 14 US cents. 1 US$ = ~26.50 roubles

2006-12-12 14:28:36 · answer #1 · answered by Igor K 2 · 3 0

In fact there were even 2 designs of this bill (1992 and early 1993). Check whether yours looks like one of these:
http://img.rian.ru/images/5206/23/52062302.jpg
http://img.rian.ru/images/5206/23/52062326.jpg

You can find more information about Russian bills here:
http://www.cbr.ru/eng/bank-notes_coins/bank-notes/main.asp

2006-12-13 10:28:47 · answer #2 · answered by hec 5 · 1 0

I never saw one.. I had 1,000 ruble bills tho.. It would be pointless to have a 10,000 ruble bill .. where are you gonna break it?

2006-12-15 13:02:41 · answer #3 · answered by Hannah Leigh 2 · 0 1

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