This piece belongs to a brief series issued by the Bank of Zambia in the late 1990s that reproduced foreign currency designs on commemorative coinage — a gimmick that saw some currency boards licensing banknote imagery for novelty collector pieces during that decade. The 50 Euro note motif is particularly odd given that Zambia has no connection to the Eurozone; the coin predates the euro's physical introduction in 2002 by several years, making it a speculative promotional issue tied to anticipation of the single currency's launch rather than any actual circulation relationship.
This piece belongs to a brief series issued by the Bank of Zambia in the late 1990s that reproduced foreign currency designs on commemorative coinage — a gimmick that saw some currency boards licensing banknote imagery for novelty collector pieces during that decade. The 50 Euro note motif is particularly odd given that Zambia has no connection to the Eurozone; the coin predates the euro's physical introduction in 2002 by several years, making it a speculative promotional issue tied to anticipation of the single currency's launch rather than any actual circulation relationship.