Finition spéciale appliquée à certaines monnaies de collection. Elles sont frappées avec un outillage neuf et présentent un aspect brillant et parfait, sans aucune trace de dégradation du fait qu'elles n'ont jamais été mises en circulation.
Mintage
10000
Millésime
2024
Valeur faciale
2€
Click here to discover the Paris 2024 collections on video !On the occasion of the Olympic and Paralympic Summer Games taking place in France in 2024, Monnaie de Paris celebrates this major international competition. It honors Sport, its values, i...
On the occasion of the Olympic and Paralympic Summer Games taking place in France in 2024, Monnaie de Paris celebrates this major international competition. It honors Sport, its values, its athletes and the heritage of the host country. Olympism and Paralympism are highlighted on those products, struck in France in our art workshops.
Following on from the series of collections launched since 2021, France celebrates the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games on a circulating coin: a commemorative €2!
The events of the PARIS 2024 Summer Games will take place in several cities. The Eiffel Tower in Paris, the Basilica of Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde in Marseille and the Tiaré flower in Tahiti represent the variety of venues for the sporting events.
The €2 FRANCE will be available in a Brilliant Uncirculated quality, which is of a higher quality than the coins currently in circulation in a sealed card. Minted in 10,000 copies, it will also be available in the Look des Jeux coinset.
The Collection
Monnaie de Paris celebrates the Olympic and Paralympic Games with various innovative and new collections over several years, showcasing the sportsmen and the Olympic spirit. Collection coins, commemorative 2€, gold and silver Euro or medallions, these collections put the spotlight on the disciplines, places and icons of the Olympics.
Our craftman
THE MEDAL MINTER
The medal minter transforms a blank into a medal, alternating between striking to bring out the relief and annealing to return the metal to a more malleable state. The blank is struck as many times as necessary, depending on the diameter, depth and detail of the engraving. Finally, surface treatments are applied to enhance the finished piece
THE MINTER
The first minters began to ply their trade in France when striking with a hammer appeared in the 4th century BC. Nowdays, minsters use press instead of a hammer. Their knowledge of dies, engraving and metals, and their expertise - passed seamlessly down from one generation to the next for centuries - guarantees the excellence of their work.