The Greek Eurocent coins were also unique for being labelled in lepta, the old subsidiary unit of the drachma.
@PugJesus reminds me of this

@PugJesus I support this and all other attempts at confusing the hell out of future archeologists.
Wait… There is different Greek euro coins than the rest of Europe? Do all European countries have their own euros?
I always assumed a centralized currency went hand in hand with the eu membership
Every country that is a member of the Eurozone mints their own coins with their own motifs. Only the paper notes are standardized.
To illustrate: these are all the (different) coins in my wallet:

(values from left to right: 1 Euro, 20 cent, 10 cent, 5 cent, 1 cent)
The only countries I can determine are Spain (twice), Germany (thrice), Greece (once) and the Netherlands (once). Mostly because Spain and the Netherlands wrote their country’s name on their coins and Greece used Greek letters.
all countries have their specific coins :) amd sometimes there’s a limited few for anniversarys or in honour of someone.
germans depict their architecture, dutch depict their royalty, croats got 50 cents with nikola teslas face…
always makes you wonder where the foreign coin you just paid with has been so far.
1 EYPQ
hoot hoot
That’s EYPΩ






