2 euro commemorative coins


€2 commemorative coins are special euro coins minted and issued by member states of the eurozone since 2004 as legal tender in all eurozone member states. Only the national obverse sides of the coins differ; the common reverse sides do not. The coins typically commemorate the anniversaries of historical events or draw attention to current events of special importance. In 2007, 2009, 2012 and 2015, there were common commemorative coins with only different national inscriptions. Up to end of 2017, three hundred and two variations of €2 commemorative coins have been minted – six in 2004, eight in 2005, seven in 2006, twenty in 2007, ten in 2008, twenty-five in 2009, twelve in 2010, sixteen in 2011, thirty in 2012, twenty-three in 2013, twenty-six in 2014, forty-seven in 2015, and thirty-two both in 2016 and 2017. Finland, Italy, Luxembourg, San Marino and the Vatican City are the only countries to have released at least one commemorative coin every year since 2004.
The number of commemorative coins is limited to two per country per year and to 5 percent of the total mintage output. Limits on the designs are also in place to ensure uniformity.
The €2 commemorative coins have become collectibles, but are different from commemorative coins with a face value different from €2, which are officially designated as "collector coins" and usually made of precious metals.

Regulations and restrictions

The basis for the commemorative coins is derived from a decision of the European Council, which allowed changing the national obverse sides of euro coins from 1 January 2004 onwards. However, a number of recommendations and restrictions still apply.
Two restrictions concern the design. Euro coins must still have a common reverse side, so only the national obverse sides may be varied. Also, the standard national obverse sides per se should not be changed before 2008 at the earliest, unless the head of state depicted on some coins changes before then.
Further regulations restrict the frequency and number of commemorative coin issues. Until 2012, each member state could only issue one commemorative coin per year, and since that year two coins per year, and they shall only be denominated as €2 coins. The total number of such coins put into circulation per year should not surpass the higher of the following two numbers:
Another decision added two more guidelines regarding the design of the coins. The state issuing a coin should in some way clearly be identified on the obverse side, either by stating the full name or a clearly identifiable abbreviation of it; and neither name nor the denomination of the coin should be repeated on the obverse, as it is already featured on the common reverse side.
These restrictions do not apply retroactively; only new designs—the national obverse sides for regular issues of states newly joining the euro or of eurozone states which change their design, and €2 commemorative coins issued from 2006 onwards—are subject to them. However, the five countries whose designs violated the first update to the rules initially were assumed to have to change their design in the future, which Finland did for 2007 and Belgium for 2008.
Another decision changed the rules again:
Belgium was forced to change its design back to show the original portrait of its monarch, because the 2008 update to follow the recommendations also updated the portrait, which was against the rules. The Belgian coins from 2009 onwards show the original royal portrait of 1999, but otherwise keep the new 2008 coin design as far as the country identification and year mark are concerned. These provisions additionally prohibit further sede vacante sets of coins by the Vatican City, allowing only commemorative coins for such occasions. Spain updated their design from 2010 onwards to meet the new rules, leaving Austria, Germany, Greece, Luxembourg and Slovenia in breach of them still.
In 2012, the European Council set up new specifications of euro coins and named a deadline for national sides of regular coins to be updated to fully comply with the current regulation: 20 June 2012. Also in 2012, a new EU regulation on the issuance of euro coins was concluded, increasing the allowed number of national €2 commemorative coins per year to two.

Issues

Twenty three countries have independently issued €2 commemorative coins, with Greece being the first country to issue this type of coin. There have also been four common €2 commemorative coins issued by all eurozone member states:


Issued designs are made public in the Official Journal of the European Union.

2004 coinage

2005 coinage

2006 coinage

2007 coinage

2007 commonly issued coin

2008 coinage

2009 coinage

2009 commonly issued coin

2010 coinage

2011 coinage

2012 coinage

2012 commonly issued coin

2013 coinage

2014 coinage

2015 coinage

2015 commonly issued coin

2016 coinage

2017 coinage

2018 coinage

2019 coinage

2020 coinage

2021 coinage

2022 coinage

2022 commonly issued coin

2023 coinage

2024 coinage

2025 coinage

German Bundesländer series

started the commemorative coin series Die 16 Bundesländer der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in 2006, which will continue until 2022. The year in which the coin for a specific state is issued coincides with that state's Presidency of the Bundesrat. In 2018, the last three coins of the series were postponed to 2020, 2021 and 2022, respectively. This was because in 2019 Schleswig-Holstein assumed the presidency of the Bundesrat again. Since they had already been honored with its first coin in 2006, Germany decided to mint a coin commemorating 70 years since the constitution of the Federal Council in 2019 instead.

YearNumberStateDesign
20061Holstentor in Lübeck
20072Schwerin Castle
20083St. Michaelis Church
20094Ludwigskirche in Saarbrücken
20105Bremen City Hall and Roland
20116Cologne Cathedral
20127Neuschwanstein Castle near Füssen
20138Maulbronn Abbey near Pforzheim
20149St. Michael's Church in Hildesheim
201510Paulskirche in Frankfurt am Main
201611Zwinger Palace in Dresden
201712Porta Nigra in Trier
201813Charlottenburg Palace
201914Federal Council
202015Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam
202116Cathedral of Magdeburg
202217Wartburg Castle in Eisenach


Originally, the designs for the following states were different:
The series is similar to the United States' 50 State Quarters series, which saw fifty coins issued for its fifty constituent states, five per year between 1999 and 2008. A separate program saw six coins issued in 2009 for the District of Columbia and five territories of the United States.

Latvian Historical Regions series


YearNumberDesign
20161Vidzeme's coat of arms
20172Courland's coat of arms
20173Latgale's coat of arms
20184Semigallia's coat of arms

Lithuanian Ethnographical">Ethnography">Ethnographical Regions series

Including Samogitia, Aukštaitija, Dzūkija, Suvalkija and Lithuania Minor

YearNumberDesign
20191Samogitia's coat of arms
20202Aukštaitija's coat of arms
20213Dzūkija's coat of arms
20224TBA
20235TBA

Luxembourgish Grand-Ducal Dynasty series


YearNumberDukes DepictedDesign
20041Grand Duke HenriThe effigy Grand Duke Henri and his monogramm
20052Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke AdolpheThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke Adolphe
20063Grand Duke Henri and Guillaume, Hereditary Grand Duke of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Guillaume, Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg
20074Grand Duke HenriThe effigy Grand Duke Henri and the Grand Ducal Palace, Luxembourg
20085Grand Duke HenriThe effigy Grand Duke Henri and Berg Castle
20096Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess CharlotteThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess Charlotte
20107Grand Duke HenriThe effigy Grand Duke Henri and the emblem of the Grand Duke
20118Grand Duke Henri, Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and Charlotte, Grand Duchess of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri, Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg
20129Grand Duke Henri and William IV, Grand Duke of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri, William IV, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and the outline of Luxembourg.
201210Grand Duke Henri, Guillaume, Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg and Stéphanie, Hereditary Grand Duchess of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri, Hereditary Grand Duke Guillaume and Countess Stéphanie de Lannoy
201311Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri and the National Anthem of the Grand Duchy
201412Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri
201413Grand Duke Henri and Jean, Grand Duke of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg
201514Grand Duke Henri and Maria Teresa, Grand Duchess of LuxembourgThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Maria Teresa, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg
201515Grand Duke Henri, Grand Duke Jean, Grand Duchess Charlotte, Grand Duchess Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duke William IV and Grand Duke AdolpheThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri, Grand Duke Jean, Grand Duchess Charlotte, Grand Duchess Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duke William IV and Grand Duke Adolphe
201616Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri and the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge
201717Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri and the Cap Badge of the Luxembourg Army
201718Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke William IIIThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke William III
201819Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri and the Constitution of Luxembourg
201820Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke William IThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duke William I
201921Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess CharlotteThe effigies of Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess Charlotte
201922Grand Duke HenriThe effigy of Grand Duke Henri and a ballot box
202023Grand Duke Henri and Prince Henry of Orange-NassauTBA
202024Grand Duke HenriTBA

Maltese series

Maltese constitutional history


YearNumberDesign
20111First Election of Representatives in 1849
20122Majority Representation in 1887
20133Establishment of Self-Government in 1921
20144Independence from Britain in 1964
20155Proclamation of the Republic of Malta in 1974

From Children in Solidarity


YearNumberDesign
20161Solidarity through love
20172Solidarity and peace
20183Cultural heritage
20194Nature/Environment
20205Games

Maltese Prehistoric Sites


YearNumberDesign
20161Ġgantija
20172Ħaġar Qim
20183Mnajdra
20194Ta' Ħaġrat Temples
20205Skorba Temples
20216Tarxien Temples
20227Hypogeum of Ħal-Saflieni

Spanish UNESCO World Heritage Sites series

started the commemorative coin series Patrimonio de la Humanidad de la UNESCO in 2010, commemorating all of Spain's UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which could continue until 2050. The order in which the coin for a specific site is issued coincides with the order in which they were declared a UNESCO World Heritage site. The coins issued are:

YearNumberDesign
20101Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba
20112Patio de los Leones of the Alhambra in Granada
20123Burgos Cathedral
20134Monastery and Site of the Escorial
20145Park Güell
20156Cave of Altamira
20167Aqueduct
20178Santa María del Naranco
20189Santiago de Compostela
201910Ávila with its Extra-Muros Churches
202011Mudéjar Architecture of Aragon
202112Historic City of Toledo
202213Garajonay National Park