The cornflower (*Centaurea cyanus*) was designated Estonia's national flower in 1968, a choice made under Soviet occupation that carried quiet cultural weight — a small assertion of Estonian identity within a system designed to suppress it. The 2024 euro issue commemorates the flower's centenary as a national symbol in the broader sense, though the designation itself has roots in 19th-century national awakening movements tied to the song festival tradition.
Estonia joined the eurozone in 2011, and its commemorative 2 euro program has been notably restrained compared to larger member states.
The cornflower (*Centaurea cyanus*) was designated Estonia's national flower in 1968, a choice made under Soviet occupation that carried quiet cultural weight — a small assertion of Estonian identity within a system designed to suppress it. The 2024 euro issue commemorates the flower's centenary as a national symbol in the broader sense, though the designation itself has roots in 19th-century national awakening movements tied to the song festival tradition.
Estonia joined the eurozone in 2011, and its commemorative 2 euro program has been notably restrained compared to larger member states.