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| - Coins currently not existing shown in gray. According to EU Regulation 651/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 July 2012, collector’s coins issued by member countries need to show a value that is not available in normal coinage. Commemorative coins use the normal 2€ coin with special national face. Actual collector coins (often partially made of silver or gold) have been issued with the following denominations: 0.25 € (¼ €), 1.50 € (1½ €), 1.75 € (175 ¢, 1¾ €), 2.50 € (2½ €), 3 €, 4 €, 5 €, 6 €, 7 € (700 ¢), 7.50 € (7½ €), 8 €, 10 €, 12 €, 12.50 € (12½ €), 15 €, 20 €, 25 €, 30 €, 50 €, 100 €, 200 €, 250 €, 300 €, 400 €, 500 €, 1’000 €, 2’000 €, 5’000 € and even 100’000 €.
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| abstract
| - Coins currently not existing shown in gray. According to EU Regulation 651/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 July 2012, collector’s coins issued by member countries need to show a value that is not available in normal coinage. Commemorative coins use the normal 2€ coin with special national face. Actual collector coins (often partially made of silver or gold) have been issued with the following denominations: 0.25 € (¼ €), 1.50 € (1½ €), 1.75 € (175 ¢, 1¾ €), 2.50 € (2½ €), 3 €, 4 €, 5 €, 6 €, 7 € (700 ¢), 7.50 € (7½ €), 8 €, 10 €, 12 €, 12.50 € (12½ €), 15 €, 20 €, 25 €, 30 €, 50 €, 100 €, 200 €, 250 €, 300 €, 400 €, 500 €, 1’000 €, 2’000 €, 5’000 € and even 100’000 €. Please note that during the Latin Monetary Union in the late 19th and early 20th century, several currencies were linked 1:1 (e.g. French and Swiss Franc, Italian Lira and Greek Drachm) based on a gold and silver standard. There were gold coins with denominations of 100 ¤, 50 ¤, 20 ¤, 10 ¤, 5 ¤ and silver coins valued 5 ¤, 2 ¤, 1 ¤, 0.20 ¤, 0.10 ¤.
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