30 drachmas, silver (weight reduced from the 1963 coin). Commemorates the wedding of King Constantine II and Anne-Marie of Denmark. Obverse shows profiles of the couple, reverse the royal crowned double-headed eagle.
1970 - military junta
In 1970 the Greek junta regime issued a number of commemorative coins with the coup d'état of 1967 as a topic.
50 drachmas, silver and copper, phoenix, soldier, 21 April 1967
100 drachmas, silver and copper, phoenix, soldier, 21 April 1967
20 drachmas, gold and copper, phoenix, soldier, 21 April 1967
100 drachmas, gold and copper, phoenix, soldier, 21 April 1967
1978 - 50 years Bank of Greece
The Bank of Greece celebrated its 50th birthday with a commemorative coin in 1978.
100 drachmas, silver, Athena, Bank of Greece 50 years, 1928–1978
1979 - Greece enters the EEC
The coins issued in 1979 celebrating Greece's entry into the European Economic Community were the first ones to feature the modern version of the Greek plural δραχμές instead of δραχμαί.
Coins issued in 1981 and 1982 celebrated the 13th Paneuropean games, which were held in Athens in 1982. Although minted two years after the 1979 coin, all of these coins featured the old spelling δραχμαί again.
100 drachmas, copper and nickel, chess olympiad emblem and the White Tower
500 drachmas, silver, chess olympiad emblem and ancient chess players
1990 - 50th anniversary 28 October 1940
The two coins minted in 1990 celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Italian invasion in Greece in World War II. The 28th of October is celebrated every year as a national holiday in Greece.
1,000 drachmas, silver, soldiers with horse, 28 October 1940
20,000 drachmas, gold, soldiers with horse, 28 October 1940
1991 - Mediterranean games in Athens
Two coins were minted in 1991 to celebrate the 11th Mediterranean Games, which were held in Athens that year.
An unusual anniversary, 2500 years of democracy, counting from Cleisthenes' democratic constitution of Athens of 508 BCE, was celebrated with two commemorative drachma coins in 1993.
Released for the upcoming 2004 XXVIII Olympic games to be held in Athens, these six 500 drachmas coins were produced in copper-nickel. Each had a mintage of 4,000,000. They could be purchased as complete sets. The obverse showed a victor's laurel crown. Reverse designs were as follows: