Belgian euro coins feature only a single design for all eight coins: the portrait or effigy of King Albert II of the Belgians and his royal monogram. An effigy is a representation of a person especially in the form of Sculpture. Life Prince Albert was sent to the Swiss private school Institut Le Rosey for his pre-university education A monogram is a motif made by overlapping or combining two or more letters or other Graphemes to form one Symbol. Also part of the design by Jan Alfons Keustermans are the 12 stars of the EU and the year of imprint.
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For images of the common side and a detailed description of the coins, see euro coins. Linguistic Linguistic
In Belgium, the euro was introduced in 2002. However, the first sets of coins were minted, as preparation, in 1999. Hence the first euro coins of Belgium have minted the year 1999 instead of 2002.
Belgian euro coins dated 1999–2007 have the portrait of King Albert II.
| € 0. 01 | € 0. 02 | € 0. 05 |
|---|---|---|
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| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
| € 0. Life Prince Albert was sent to the Swiss private school Institut Le Rosey for his pre-university education 10 | € 0. 20 | € 0. 50 |
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| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
| € 1. 00 | € 2. 00 | € 2 Coin Edge |
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| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
In order to conform to the common guidelines on the design of national faces of coins, Belgium has updated the design of the Belgian national face of euro coins to be produced from 2008. The Kingdom of Belgium is a Country in northwest Europe. It is a founding member of the European Union and hosts its headquarters as well as those Coins from previous years featuring the old Belgian national face will remain valid.
The changes are:
As from 2008, the Belgian euro coins also adopted the new common map like the rest of the eurozone countries, some of which adopt it in 2007. A proportion of the Belgian 2 euro coins -common part, the map looks smooth, whereas, the same map on the euros coming from other eurozone countries is dotted.
Belgium is the second state in the EMU, after Finland, to change the design of their standard circulation euro coins in accordance with recommendations defined by the Economic and Financial Affairs Council of the European Union. Finnish euro coins feature three separate designs Heikki Häiväoja provided the design for the 1 cent – 50 cent coins Pertti Mäkinen provided the design for [1]
| € 0. 01 | € 0. 02 | € 0. 05 |
|---|---|---|
| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
| € 0. Life Prince Albert was sent to the Swiss private school Institut Le Rosey for his pre-university education 10 | € 0. 20 | € 0. 50 |
| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
| € 1. 00 | € 2. 00 | € 2 Coin Edge |
| Effigy and monogram of King Albert II | ||
Renovation of the Atomium in Brussels (2006) | 50th Anniversary of the Signature of the Treaty of Rome (2007) | 60th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (2008) |
Belgium has a good collection of euro commemorative coins, solely in silver and gold. main - title €2 commemorative coins keywords numismatics coin review - status The Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union (Belgisch-Luxemburgse Economische Unie Union économique belgo-luxembourgeoise, Belsch-Lëtzebuerger Wirtschaftsunioun abbreviated to Renovation is the process of improving a structure Two prominent types of renovations are commercial and residential The Atomium is a monument built for Expo '58, the 1958 Brussels World's Fair. Brussels (Bruxelles pronounced; Brussel pronounced) officially the Brussels Capital-Region, is The Universal Declaration of Human Rights ( UDHR) is a declaration adopted by the United Nations General Assembly ( 10 December 1948 at Palais Euro gold and silver commemorative coins are special Euro coins minted and issued by member states of the Eurozone, mainly in Gold and This article covers only the Gold and Silver issues of the euro commemorative coins (collectors coins Silver (ˈsɪlvɚ is a Chemical element with the symbol " Ag " (argentum from the Ancient Greek: ἀργήντος - argēntos gen Gold (ˈɡoʊld is a Chemical element with the symbol Au (from its Latin name aurum) and Atomic number 79 Their face value range from 10 euro to 100 euro. This is mainly done as a legacy of old national practice of minting gold and silver coins. These coins are not really intended to be used as means of payment, so generally they do not circulate. Here you can find some samples:
Silver, 10 euro, Maurice Maeterlinck (2008) | Gold, 50 euro, Treaty of rome 50th anniversary (2007) | Gold, 100 euro, 200 years anniversary of the Germinal Franc (2003) | Gold, 12. 5 euro, Leopold I (2006) |