1158.67 Russian rubles. This needs to be calculated based on the exchange rate of the day. It is known that the exchange rate on December 15, 2021 is 1 yuan = 11.5867 Russian rubles. Then, 100 yuan = 1158.67 Russian rubles.
Russian Ruble:
The Russian Central Bank determined the currency symbol of the Russian legal tender ruble on December 11, 2013. Its shape is similar to a capital letter P. But there is an extra horizontal line in the lower part of P. This currency symbol was voted for by 280,000 Russians, with a support rate of 61.
The website of the Central Bank of Russia announced the same day that the central bank approved the currency symbol used to represent the ruble - "_", which is shaped like the capital Cyrillic letter Р, but is supplemented by the lower part of Р. Use a horizontal line so that the middle of the letter P forms a "=". These two parallel lines symbolize the stable status of the ruble. However, at the end of 2014, the ruble depreciated significantly.
The ruble was originally the monetary unit of Tsarist Russia. The price comparison with gold began to be established in 1800. The gold content of ruble banknotes in 1897 was 0.774234 grams. From 1922 to 1924, the Soviet Union carried out currency reforms. In January 1961, currency reform was implemented again. The gold content of the ruble was set at 0.987412 grams, and the exchange rate against the US dollar was set at 0.9 rubles per US dollar. This exchange rate has not changed significantly in the past 30 years. On October 28, 1989, the Soviet Union announced the implementation of dual exchange rates.
In the former Soviet Union, the currency value of the ruble was as high as 2 US dollars. However, after the disintegration of the Soviet Union, inflation was very rapid, and the currency value of the ruble dropped sharply, reaching a minimum of 1,400 rubles per US dollar. Russia began to issue new rubles in 1994. After Putin was elected president, he implemented the policy of controlling inflation. The new rubles have reached nearly 26 rubles per US dollar. In order to make the ruble one of the international currencies, Russia decided in 2006 to choose an exclusive symbol for the ruble vote. On July 1 of the same year, the ruble became a freely convertible currency. On October 30, 2013, to commemorate the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, Russia issued the "2014 Sochi Winter Olympics" commemorative banknote. This was also the first time in Russian history that a commemorative banknote was issued.