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10 Euros

Issuer European Central Bank
Year 2002
Type Fantasy banknote
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Obverse description Romanesque arch vignette at centre-right rendered in intaglio in red-brown tones, with a large numeral '10' to the right and a ring of twelve EU stars at upper left. Issuer abbreviations in multiple scripts appear along the top margin, with bilingually inscribed denomination 'EURO / EYPO' at lower left.
Obverse lettering 10 © BCE ECB EZB EKT EKP 2002
10
EURO
ΕΥΡΩ
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Comments

Robert Kalina won the internal ECB design competition in 1996 with a deliberately anonymous brief: no real monuments, no identifiable people, no specific national geography. The bridges and windows on the euro series are composites — architecturally plausible but fictitious, a political necessity given that any real building would privilege one member state over others. For the 2002 launch, De La Rue, Giesecke & Devrient, and several national printers produced notes simultaneously, with each country's output identifiable by a letter prefix in the serial number.

The letter "X" denotes Germany, "Y" Greece — a detail that briefly mattered when euro-skeptic commentators tried to track which countries' notes were circulating where.

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