Exhibition of € - banknotes and € - coins
12 June 2006
From 12 June to 12 July 2006 the National Museum of Slovenia is
hosting an exhibition of euro banknotes and coins. The exhibition,
organised by the European Central Bank and the European Commission,
presents the banknotes and coins of the single European currency, the
progress of the design competition for the national and European sides
of the euro coins, and the currency changeover procedure in 2002. 1
January 2002 was a historic day for over 300 million people in
Europe. It was the day when they had euro banknotes and coins in their
wallets for the first time. The launch required years of preparation
and an enormous logistical effort, for the new money started to
circulate on that same day in no fewer than 12 countries: Belgium,
Germany, Greece, Spain, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Austria, Portugal and Finland.
The aim of the exhibition, which has already been held in several
European countries, is to provide information about the euro banknotes
and coins, and to give a behind-the-scenes look at their
introduction.
The single European currency has to date been introduced by twelve
of the twenty-five Member States of the European Union. On 1 January
2007 Slovenia will join them if all goes to plan. Intensive
preparations are already under way for the introduction of the euro in
Slovenia.
Each of the countries that has introduced the euro conducted a
procedure for the selection of the design of the national side of the
euro coins. The exhibition presents the procedures for choosing the
national side of the euro coins. The euro coin series comprises eight
different values (denominations): 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 cents, € 1 and
€ 2. Each has a common European reverse side and a national obverse
side. The national side indicates the issuing country. The exhibition
also presents the selection of the original design for the European
side of the euro coins. There are three designs, depending on the coin
value. They were designed by Mr Luc Luycx of the Royal Belgian
Mint. All three designs show maps of Europe and symbolise the unity of
the European Union.
The exhibition also presents the euro banknotes, which are issued
in seven different values (denominations): € 5, € 10,
€ 20, € 50, € 100, € 200 and € 500. They were
designed by Mr Robert Kalina of Austria's central bank, who won the
Europe-wide design competition held in 1996. Each euro banknote shows
a European architectural style: classical, Romanesque, Gothic,
Renaissance, baroque and rococo, the age of iron and glass, and modern
twentieth-century architecture. On the front, the banknotes show
windows and gateways. They symbolise the European spirit of openness
and cooperation. The 12 stars of the European Union represent the
dynamism and harmony of contemporary Europe. The bridges on the back
symbolise communication among the people of Europe and between Europe
and the rest of the world.
Source: Bank of Slovenia
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