Identifying marks on euro coins


Before the introduction of the euro, the current eurozone members issued their own individual national coinage, most of which featured mint marks, privy marks and/or mint master marks. These marks have been continued as a part of the national designs of the euro coins, as well. This article serves to list the information about the various types of identifying marks on euro coins, including engraver and designer initials and the unique edge inscriptions found on the €2 coins.

Date stamps on euro coins

Since the euro was officially introduced in 1999, most of the EMU member countries began producing their coins ahead of the 2002 introduction date. There is individual national legislation in place which governs the mintage of coins issued from each country. These coinage acts regulate the coin production parameters for each country.

Mintage date

The coinage acts of countries with a mintage date stipulation specify that the year the coin is minted, regardless of when the coins are issued, should appear on each coin. Belgium, Finland, France, the Netherlands and Spain have mintage date stipulations.

Issue date

The coinage acts of countries with an issue date stipulation specify that the year the coin is issued, regardless of when the coins are minted, should appear on each coin. Austria, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, San Marino and the Vatican City have issue date stipulations.

Conclusion

Since the euro was first issued in 2002, the countries which have an issue date stipulation are all dated 2002 onward, even though these coins were minted in previous years to prepare for the adoption of the euro. As a result, there are no euro coins dated 1999, 2000 and 2001 issued from countries with an issue date stipulation.
Luxembourg has no domestic mint, so their coins are minted elsewhere. Regardless of the mintage location of these coins, the issue date stipulation in their coinage act must be followed by whichever country mints their coins and the date stamp is therefore applied accordingly.
Since Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican City do not have their own coinage acts, the date stamp is applied in accordance with the coinage act of whichever country mints these coins. France produces the euro coins for Monaco and follows the mintage date stipulation; it began minting Monégasque euro coins only in 2001, since the mintage quantities were so low. Sammarinese and Vatican euro coins are minted in Italy and follow the issue date stipulation.

National identifying marks of euro coins

As per a recommendation defined by the Economic and Financial Affairs Council of the European Union, the national designs of each member's euro coin should contain a national identification in the form of spelling or abbreviation of the country's name. Of the fifteen members of the Eurozone at the time these recommendations were made, five national designs—those of Austria, Belgium, Finland, Germany and Greece—did not meet the criteria outlined. Of these five, two have changed or amended their design to follow these recommendations, and the other three are expected to follow suit in the coming years.
CountryTypeDescriptionImage
AndorraTextANDORRA
AustriaTextREPUBLIK ÖSTERREICH
AustriaSymbolFlag of Austria. The red is indicated by vertical hatching, as is traditionally done in heraldic illustration.
BelgiumTextBELGIE-BELGIQUE-BELGIEN
BelgiumSymbolMonogram of King Albert II
BelgiumSymbolMonogram of King Philippe
BelgiumAbbreviationB
BelgiumAbbreviationBE
BulgariaTextБЪЛГАРИЯ
BulgariaEdge inscriptionБОЖЕ ПАЗИ БЪЛГАРИЯ , only on €2 coins
CroatiaTextHRVATSKA
CroatiaSymbolCroatian checkerboard
CyprusTextΚΥΠΡΟΣ/KIBRIS
EstoniaTextEESTI
FinlandAbbreviationFI
FranceTextRÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE
FranceAbbreviationstylised RF
GermanyTextBUNDESREPUBLIK DEUTSCHLAND
GermanyAbbreviationD
GermanySymbolDepiction of the Bundesadler''
GreeceTextΕΥΡΩΠΗ 2 EYPΩ
GreeceEdge inscriptionΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΗΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ, only on commemorative €2 issues since 2007
IrelandText / Symboléire Harp
ItalyTextREPUBBLICA ITALIANA
ItalyAbbreviationstylised RI
LatviaTextLATVIJA
LatviaSymbolLV
LithuaniaTextLIETUVA
LuxembourgTextLËTZEBUERG
LuxembourgTextLUXEMBOURG
LuxembourgSymbolmonogram of Grand Duke Henri
LuxembourgSymbollion
MaltaTextMALTA
MonacoTextMONACO
NetherlandsTextWILLEM-ALEXANDER KONING DER NEDERLANDEN
NetherlandsTextBEATRIX KONINGIN DER NEDERLANDEN
NetherlandsTextNEDERLAND
NetherlandsTextKONINKRIJK DER NEDERLANDEN
PortugalTextPORTUGAL
San MarinoTextSAN MARINO
SlovakiaTextSLOVENSKO
SloveniaTextSLOVENIJA
SpainTextESPAÑA
Vatican CityTextCITTÀ DEL VATICANO

Mint marks

The use of mint marks on euro coins takes one of these three forms:
  • a single letter representing a city or country
  • the abbreviation of the country's mint
  • the symbol of the country's mint
CountryMint locationMint markMint mark descriptionNotes
Belgium BrusselsHead of archangel St. Michael, patron saint of Brussels.Prior to 2008, Belgian mark had only been used on commemorative issues. Since 2008, the mark is used on both standard issue and commemorative issue coins.
Belgium Utrecht, NetherlandsMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt
FinlandVantaaLogo of the Rahapaja Oy mintThe Cornucopian logo was used until 2010. Since 2011, the logo is a heraldic lion.
FrancePessacCornucopia, Different of the Monnaie de Paris
GermanyGerman Euro coins are minted at 5 locations in GermanyA, D, F, G, JLettersA for Berlin, D for Munich, F for Stuttgart, G for Karlsruhe, J for Hamburg,
while B, C, E and H used to be mint locations that had been closed prior to the introduction of the euro.
Greece Madrid, Spain
Pessac, France
Vantaa, Finland
Athens
E,
F,
S
LettersE for Spain, F for France, S for Finland.
The initial supply of Greek euro coins were produced at three locations, in addition to the Athens mint, due to their late entry into the European Monetary Union just before the introduction date on 1 January 2002; only certain denominations of Greek coins with the date stamp of "2002" have these mint marks. Greek euro coins dated 2002 without these mint marks were produced in Athens, Greece.
All Greek euro coins bear the standard Greek mint mark symbol of the Athens mint.
Greece AthensStylised acanthus leaf
ItalyRomeRLetter
LithuaniaVilniusLietuvos monetų kalykla logo
Luxembourg Utrecht, NetherlandsMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt
Luxembourg Vantaa, FinlandS, Letter, logo of the Rahapaja Oy mint
Luxembourg Pessac, FranceF, Letter, Cornucopia, Different of the Monnaie de Paris
Luxembourg Utrecht, NetherlandsMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt
Malta Paris, FranceFLetter-
Malta Utrecht, NetherlandsMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt There were no standard issue coins in 2009, only one commemorative coin.
MonacoPessac, FranceCornucopia, Different of the Monnaie de Paris
NetherlandsUtrechtMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt
PolandWarsawMennica Polska logoPoland is not yet part of the Eurozone. When the euro is introduced, this is the mintmark which will be used.
The Polish Mint logo is the letter M on top of the letter W and comes from Mennica Warszawa or Warsaw Mint
Portugal LisbonINCMImprensa Nacional – Casa de Moeda abbreviation
Portugal LisbonCASA DA MOEDAMint House textThis mark is only been used on commemorative issues.
San MarinoRome, ItalyRLetter
SlovakiaKremnicaMincovňa Kremnica logo
Slovenia Vantaa, FinlandFiAbbreviation
Slovenia Utrecht, NetherlandsMercury's wand, the logo of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt
SpainMadridFábrica Nacional de Moneda y Timbre logo
VaticanRome, ItalyRLetter

Mint master marks and privy marks

Mint master marks or privy marks are symbols representing directors, chief engravers or chief executive officers of mints.

Belgium

The directors of the Monnaie Royale de Belgique/''Koninklijke Munt van België'' in Brussels uses mint master's marks on all €2 commemorative coins and on all Belgian euro coins with a datestamp from 2008 onwards minted at this location.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
ScaleRomain Coenen1999–2009
2008–2009
QuillSerge Lesens2009-2012
2010–2012
CatBernard Gillard2012-2016
2013-2016
Coat of arms of HerzeleIngrid van Herzele2017–2022
Aster and Erlenmeyer flaskGiovanni Van de Velde2023–present

Finland

The director of the Rahapaja Oy mint in Helsinki-Vantaa used a mint master's mark on Finnish euro coins minted at this location with the date stamp between 1999 and 2006.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
MLetterRaimo Makkonen1999–2006

France

The directors of Monnaie de Paris in Pessac use mint master's marks on all French euro coins minted at this location.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
BeePierre Rodier1999–2000
HorseshoeGérard Buquoy2001–2002
Stylised heart with the initials of the mint masterSerge Levet2003
Hunting horn, a wave and a fishHubert Larivière2004–2010
Pentagon with letters AG, MP and YSYves Sampo2011–2020
Square with letters JJJoaquin Jimenez2021–present

Luxembourg

Luxembourg euro coins dated 2002 were minted in the Netherlands in 2000 and thus bear the mint master mark of E. J. van Schauwenburg, Temporary Director of the Utrecht Mint during the year of coin production. The Coinage Act of Luxembourg stipulates that national coins cannot have a date stamp prior to the year of issue. Therefore, Luxembourg euro coins bear the mint master mark of the Temporary Director at the time of minting, despite the date on the coins.
Coins dated 2003–2004 bear the mint master mark of Maarten Brouwer, Director of the Utrecht Mint from 2003–2015.
Luxembourgish euro coins dated 2005–2006 were produced at Rahapaja Oy, in Helsinki-Vantaa, Finland. Since the mint director does not affix a mint master mark to coins in production at that location, these coins do not bear a mint master mark but an S and the logo of the 'Suomen Rahapaja' instead.
Luxembourg euro coins dated 2007-2008 were produced at Monnaie de Paris, in Pessac, France and bear the mint master mark of Hubert Larivière, Director of the Paris Mint.
As of 2009, coins are again minted at the Royal Dutch Mint in Utrecht, the Netherlands. Until 2015 it was again the mint master mark of Maarten Brouwer. From 2016-2017 Kees Bruinsma was the Temporary Director of the Utrecht Mint.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
Bow and arrow with a starE. J. van Schauwenburg2002
SailboatMaarten Brouwer2003–2004
Hunting horn, a wave and a fishHubert Larivière2007–2008
SailboatMaarten Brouwer2009–2015
Sailboat with a starKees Bruinsma2016–2017
St. Servatius BridgeStephan Satijn2017–2021
RavenBert van Ravenswaaij2022–present

Monaco

Monegasque euro coins are produced by Monnaie de Paris, in Pessac, France beginning in 2001 and thus bear the mint master mark of Gérard Buquoy, Serge Levet, Hubert Larivière and Yves Sampo Directors of the Mint from 2001–2002, 2003, 2004–2010 and 2011–present respectively.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
HorseshoeGérard Buquoy2001–2002
Stylised heart with the initials of the mint masterSerge Levet2003
Hunting horn, a wave and a fishHubert Larivière2004–2010
Pentagon with letters AG, MP and YSYves Sampo2011–2020
Square with letters JJJoaquin Jimenez2021–present

Netherlands

The mint masters of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt in Utrecht use mint master's marks on all Dutch euro coins minted at this location.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
Bow and arrowDrs. Chr. van Draanen1999
Bow and arrow with a starE. J. van Schauwenburg2000
Vine branch and fruitsR. Bruens2001
Vine branch and fruits with a starMaarten Brouwer2002
SailboatMaarten Brouwer2003–2015
Sailboat with a starKees Bruinsma2016–2017
St. Servatius BridgeStephan Satijn2017–present

Slovenia

Slovenian euro coins dated 2008 were produced at Koninklijke Nederlandse Munt in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and bear the mint master mark of Maarten Brouwer, director of the Royal Dutch Mint from 2003 until 2015.
MarkMark descriptionName of mint masterCoin dates
SailboatMaarten Brouwer2008

Designer, sculptor and engraver initials on euro coins

Each country had the opportunity to design its own national side of the euro coin. Most coins bear the initials or the name of the designer somewhere in the national design. For example, all eight motives of the common reverse sides of the euro coins bear the stylised initials "LL" for Luc Luycx.

€2 edge inscriptions

With each member of the Eurozone comes a set of individual coin designs. Included in the individuality of the national obverse face of the euro coins, whose design is left to the member states, is the edge of the €2 coin. Each member was allowed to design a unique inscription that would appear on the €2 coin's edge. Some of these edge inscriptions are carried over from the coins of the yielded currencies in circulation prior to the introduction of the euro.

Commemorative issue €2 edge inscriptions

Generally the edge inscription of a €2 commemorative coin does not change from the standard issue counterpart. There are a few exceptions.
Year and CountryEdge inscriptionDescription
Finland "YK 1945–2005 FN" followed by three lion's heads. "YK" stands for Yhdistyneet Kansakunnat and "FN" for Förenta Nationerna. Issued to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations and Finland's 50 year membership in the UN.
Finland "ROMFÖRDRAGET 50 ÅR EUROPA". Issued to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome.
Finland "TALOUS-JA RAHALIITTO EMU" ("ECONOMIC AND MONETARY UNION EMU" in Finnish, one of the official languages of Finland. Issued to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union.

In 2008, a European Commission's recommendation was approved in which the following was stated: "The legend engraved on the edge of the commemorative euro coins intended for circulation must be the same as that on the normal euro coins intended for circulation." In 2012, a European Regulation was approved in which, with a binding nature, the previous restriction was specified.