Italian euro coins

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European Union
Types of
euro coins

Eurozone
(and microstates which
mint their own coins)
Austria | Belgium
Finland | France
Germany | Greece
Ireland | Italy
Luxembourg | Monaco
Netherlands | Portugal
San Marino | Spain
Vatican
New Member States
Cyprus | Czech Republic
Estonia | Hungary
Latvia | Lithuania
Malta | Poland
Slovakia | Slovenia
Acceding countries
Bulgaria | Romania
Other
Andorra | Sweden
Denominations
€0.01 | €0.02 | €0.05
€0.10 | €0.20 | €0.50
€1 | €2
€2 commemorative coins

Note: Denmark and the UK
currently opt to maintain their
national currencies, the krone
and the pound. Sweden has
not made any effort towards its
obligation to join after the
failed referendum in 2003.

Italian euro coins all have a design unique to each coin, though there is a common theme of famous Italian works of art from one of Italy's renowned artists. Each coin is designed by a different designer, from the 1 cent to the 2 euro coin they are: Eugenio Driutti, Luciana De Simoni, Ettore Lorenzo Frapiccini, Claudia Momoni, Maria Angela Cassol, Roberto Mauri, Laura Cretara and Maria Carmela Colaneri. All designs feature the 12 stars of the EU, the year of imprint and the overlapping letters "RI" for Repubblica Italiana (Italian Republic). There are no Italian euro coins dated earlier than 2002, even though they were certainly minted earlier, as they were first distributed to the public in December 2001.

The choice of the design of the coins was left to the Italian public by means of a TV broadcast where alternative designs were presented, letting the people vote by calling a certain telephone number. However, the 1-euro coin was missing in this "election", because Carlo Azeglio Ciampi (now ex-President of the Italian Republic), then Economy minister, had already decided it would sport the Vitruvian man of Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo's work is highly symbolical as it represents the Renaissance focus on man as the measure of all things, and has simultaneously a round shape that fits the coin perfectly. As president Ciampi observed, this represents the "coin to the service of Man", instead of Man to the service of money.

For images of the common side and a detailed description of the coins, see Euro coins.

Depiction of Italian euro coinage | Obverse side
€ 0.01 € 0.02 € 0.05
image:1ec_ita.png
image:2ec_ita.png
image:5ec_ita.png
The Castel del Monte, a
13th century castle in Apulia
Mole Antonelliana, a tower
symbolising the city of Turin
The Colosseum in Rome,
famous Roman amphitheatre
€ 0.10
€ 0.20
€ 0.50
image:10ec_ita.png
image:20ec_ita.png
image:50ec_ita.png
The Birth of Venus by
painter Sandro Botticelli
The futurist sculpture Unique
Forms of Continuity in
Space
by Umberto Boccioni
The Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius
€ 1.00
€ 2.00
€ 2 Coin Edge
image:1e_ita.png
image:2e_ita.png
The edge lettering features
the number "2" six times
alternated with ** for a
total of 12 stars
Vitruvian Man, drawing
by Leonardo da Vinci
Portrait of Dante Alighieri by
painter Raphael
 

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