Rubles Gold
Posted in Uncategorized on 04/30/2005 02:20 am by admin
Rubles Gold
![]() |
![]() 1899 GOLD 10 ROUBLES COIN FROM RUSSIA US $489.00
|
![]() 1980 RUSSIA 6 PCOLYMPIC PROOF GOLD 100 ROUBLES SET US $5,500.00
|
![]() 1898 GOLD 5 ROUBLES FROM THE EMPIRE OF RUSSIA US $279.00
|
![]() Russian GOLD 5 Rubles Coin 1903 US $319.00
|
![]() 1897 RUSSIAN 15 RUBLE GOLD COIN US $950.00
|
![]() 1899 RUSSIAN 10 RUBLE GOLD COIN US $450.00
|
![]() 1897 RUSSIAN 75 RUBLE GOLD COIN US $600.00
|
![]() 1902 AP RUSSIAN 5 ROUBLE RUBLE GOLD COIN NGC MS 67 US $439.00
|
![]() Rare antique 19th C coin holder for gold roubles and francs US $1,500.00
|
![]() Belarus 50 Roubles Owl フクロウ 頭鷹 Gold 2010 US $1,200.00
|
![]() Russia 5 roubles Gold 1899ФЗ Nicolas II XF VF US $299.00
|
![]() Russia 5 roubles gold AU UNC 1898АГ Nicolas II EXCELLENT US $299.00
|
![]() 1904 AP Gold Five 5 Roubles Nicholas II Coin PCGS MS64 US $400.00
|
![]() RUSSIAN EMPIRE 5 RUBLE 1898 RARE GOLD COIN 430gr US $390.00
|
![]() RUSSIA NICHOLAS I 5 ROUBLES 1841 GOLD 8144 US $1,990.00
|
![]() 1898 year 5 Rubles Gold of Russian Czar Nicholas ll US $350.00
|
![]() Gold 5 Roubles 1889 Offers Welcome US $1,299.99
|
![]() RUSSIA 1902 Gold 5 Roubles Much Lustre gVF aEF US $341.99
|
![]() 1904 Russia Gold 5 Roubles NGC MS66 Finest Graded None Better US $319.00
|
![]() RUSSIA 1897 GOLD 15 RUBLES RARE GREAT CONDITION ROUBLES US $1,500.00
|
![]() 1902 Russia Gold 5 Roubles NGC MS66 US $293.00
|
![]() 1903 Russia Gold 5 Roubles NGC MS66 US $305.01
|
![]() KRASNOYARSK All Russian Coop BANK 3 GOLD RUBLES 1923 US $165.00
|
![]() RUSSIA 25 ROUBLES 1994 GOLD PROOF Y 534 BAIKAL RAILROAD TUNNEL US $750.00
|
![]() Russia Gold 5 Rubles 1934 Series 703383 Pick 212 F US $12.99
|
![]() RUSSIA 5 RUBLES COIN 1900 GOLD CINI LAGUNA BEACH PEND US $1,799.10
|
![]() Belarus 50 Roubles Fox Gold 2002 US $2,199.00
|
![]() Belarus 50 Roubles Squirrel Gold 2009 US $1,200.00
|
If you have family members living in Russia, an occasion might occur when you need to send them money. You might even choose to do so regularly to help support them. Either way, you have several options, all with varying degrees of convenience and required technology.
One of the most well-known ways to transfer money to another country is to use a company as an agent. You would have to find an agent location, pay a fee, and provide the name and location where the recipient would be picking up the money. Your relative would then need to supply a password to show that the money is for them via a confirmation number and a passport, and would not have to pay a fee. Keep in mind that transfers of more than $10,000 need to be reported to the local Russian tax officials, as well as to the U.S. Treasury Department. Using an agent is often used for one-time transactions in Russia.
You can also use wire transfer services, available at most banks. In this case, you and your relative need to have the same bank, and you have to know your relative's bank account number. Depending on your bank, either you or your relative, or perhaps both, will be charged a fee for wire transfers, and it could take up to two days for the transfer to be complete in Russia. This is also an option usually used for one-time transactions rather than regular transfers, and this method allows your relative to take out cash, which they can then exchange for Rubles. If they choose, they can keep some money in the US dollar, though most Russian businesses do not accept that form so it is best to keep cash in savings accounts only.
If you plan on sending money regularly to Russia, there is a way to eliminate the need for your relative to have to go pick up the money from an agent location or pay fees every time, which is great because fees can add up. For example, Russia's Bank Menatep charges a $46 fee per transfer, while DialogBank charges 0.1 percent of the transfer amount, up to $100. However, you can avoid such fees by using a prepaid debit card, which you would buy through a company and send to your relative, reloading it whenever you want. You would do so by using a log-in name and password at the website of the debit card company for a small fee. This type of service enables you to send money online to Russia at any time.
If you are used to banking online, or use the Internet most of the day for work, the ability to send money online to Russia likely appeals to you. All three services described here allow you to use the Internet to send the money, but the fees and processes are different for each one. Be sure to research the fee of each type of service before deciding on one particular way to send money online to Russia. Also keep in mind that if your relative is staying in a smaller city in Russia, it is best to have cash since cards are not always accepted. However, larger cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg are full of businesses that gladly accept debit cards. The exchange rate of the Euro and US dollar to the Russian Ruble is better in large cities, so remind your relative to change their money only in such cities.
Clearly, if you already have the same bank as your relative in Russia, a wire transfer seems like an easy way to send money, especially if this is not a recurring payment. The same can be said about using a company as an agent. As long as your relative has transportation to the closest location where they can pick up money, this service will work. But if you need to send money to Russia frequently, nothing can beat the convenience of a prepaid debit card, which your relative can use in most cities, and even online. If your relative is in a smaller Russian city, they can still visit a bank to get money out using the card, in case they run into a business that does not accept cards. Overall, if you like the convenience of your debit card or credit card, consider how much your relative will also enjoy such a card.
It is best to think about the circumstances surrounding both you and your relative before choosing your preferred way to send money online to Russia. Whatever is most convenient and inexpensive for both of you is usually the best option.
For more information visit sending money to Russia or visit the https://www.atmcash.com/ home page for information on sending money almost anywhere in the world.
|
|
Stack of World Currencies with Rubles on Top $39.99 Stephen Alvarez Stack of World Currencies with Rubles on Top - Photographic Print |
|
|
Bushels of Rubles: Soviet Youth in Transition $179.36 This study is the third and culminating work by Kitty Weaver on Soviet youth. The first, Lenins Grandchildren, studied the Soviet child from birth to age seven. The second, Russias Future, studied Soviet children from ages seven to fourteen, the years of the Young Pioneers. This study examines the Soviet system and its education of young communists in the Komsomol (the Young Communist League) and at Moscow State University. Given the events of recent times, Weaver also shifts from examining how Soviet young people learned communism to considering how they unlearn communism. Her firsthand account is based on her travels and her study in the Soviet Union and in Russia and the other fourteen republics. The question Weaver most frequently asked, and the question implied by many of her other questions of her Soviet friends and informants was, Who are you? Their illuminating answers and her pithy comments and observations sprinkle her narrative with a sense of the everyday, providing the reader with a threedimensional portrait of Soviet life, of the hopes and the fears of Soviet youth. Author: Weaver, Kitty D./ Weaver, Kitty Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 224 Publication Date: 1992/11/30 Language: English Dimensions: 9.58 x 6.42 x 0.97 inches |
|
|
Robotika Vol. 2 : For a Few Rubles More $16.96 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Guns and Rubles : The Defense Industry in the Stalinist State $53.74 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Better a Hundred Friends Than a Hundred Rubles? : Social Networks in Transition - The Kyrgyz Republic $14.63 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Treaty of Tartu (RussianEstonian) $82.85 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles Tartu Peace Treaty (Estonian: Tartu rahu, literally Tartu peace ) or Treaty of Tartu was a peace treaty between Estonia and Russian SFSR signed on February 2, 1920 ending the Estonian War of Independence. The terms of the treaty stated that Russia unreservedly recognises the independence of Republic of Estonia de jure and renounced in perpetuity all rights to the territory of Estonia. Ratifications of the treaty were exchanged in Moscow on March 30, 1920. It was registered in League of Nations Treaty Series on July 12, 1922.The treaty established the border between Estonia and Russia, affirmed the right of Estonian people to return to Estonia and Russian people to return to Russia and required that Estonian movable property evacuated to Russia in the World War I be returned to Estonia. Russia also agreed to absolve all debt from Tsarist times and to pay Estonia 15 million gold rubles, a proportional share from gold reserves of former Russian Empire. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 104 Publication Date: 2010/12/13 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.25 inches |
|
|
Gold $10 Gold |
|
|
That's Gold $10 That's Gold - Paul The Chief Harragon |


US $250.00






























































































