Finnish euro coins (original) (raw)
The euro (EUR or €) is the common currency for most European nations within the European Union, including Finland. The euro coins have two different sides; one common, European side showing the value of the coin and one national side featuring a design chosen by the EU member state where the coin was minted. Each member state has one or more designs unique to that country.
For images of the common side and a detailed description of the coins, see Euro coins.
Finnish euro coins have three designs, though two of them are each found on one coin only. The design for the minor and middle series of coins is by Heikki H�iv�oja, the design for the 1 euro coin was done by Pertti M�kinen and the national side of the 2 euro coin is by the hand of Raimo Heino. All designs feature the 12 stars of the EU and the year of imprint.
€0,01 and €0,02 coins are not used in Finland; only a few were minted, for collectors. Sums ending in €0,01 or €0,02 are rounded down, and those ending in €0,03 or €0,04 are rounded up to €0,05.
Depiction of Finnish euro coinage | Obverse side
€ 0.01 | € 0.02 | € 0.05 |
---|---|---|
The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka | The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka | The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka |
€ 0.10 | € 0.20 | € 0.50 |
The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka | The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka | The heraldic lion of Finlandonce found on the markka |
€ 1.00 | € 2.00 | € 2 Coin Edge |
The edge lettering featuresSUOMI FINLAND and three lion's heads (SUOMI means Finland in Finnish, and FINLAND means Finland in Swedish, the two official languages in Finland) | ||
Two swans flying over aFinnish landscape | The fruit and flowers ofthe cloudberry |
- Belgian euro coins
- German euro coins
- Greek euro coins
- Spanish euro coins
- French euro coins
- Irish euro coins
- Italian euro coins
- Luxembourg euro coins
- Dutch euro coins
- Austrian euro coins
- Portuguese euro coins