Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Mike Bentley CC BY-NC

2 Euro – Spain

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Alhambra, Generalife and Albayzín
Spain
Context
Year: 2011
Issuer: Spain Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 4,080,000
Material
Diameter: 25.75 mm
Weight: 8.5 g
Thickness: 2.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Nickel brass center, Copper-nickel ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1184
Numista: #19979
Value
Exchange value: 2 EUR = $2.36
Inflation-adjusted value: 2.66 EUR

Obverse

Description:
The Court of the Lions in Granada's Alhambra, a UNESCO World Heritage site. The coin's outer ring features the twelve stars of the European Union.
Inscription:
M

ESPAÑA 2011
Translation:
Spain 2011
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Map of Europe with fifteen EU nations, flanked by six stars above and six below.
Inscription:
2 EURO

LL
Script: Latin
Engraver: Luc Luycx

Edge

Reeded with inscription
Legend:
2**2**2**2**2**2**

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint of Madrid(M)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2011M4,000,000
2011M65,000BU
2011M15,000Proof

Historical background

In 2011, Spain was in the throes of a severe sovereign debt crisis, deeply entangled in the wider Eurozone turmoil. As a member of the Eurozone, Spain did not control its own currency or monetary policy, which was set by the European Central Bank (ECB). This lack of monetary sovereignty proved critical; Spain could not devalue its currency to regain competitiveness or directly finance its government deficits, leaving it reliant on financial markets and European institutions. The crisis was fundamentally a consequence of the bursting of a massive property bubble, which left its banking sector saddled with toxic assets and triggered a deep recession, soaring unemployment, and a rapidly widening budget deficit.

The currency situation manifested as a loss of market confidence in Spanish sovereign debt, driving borrowing costs to unsustainable levels. The yield on Spain's 10-year government bonds surged perilously close to 7% in late 2011, a threshold widely seen as requiring a bailout. This reflected investor fears of a potential default or even a breakup of the Eurozone, which would force a return to a devalued national currency, the peseta. Consequently, Spain faced a vicious cycle where bank bailouts strained public finances, which in turn heightened doubts about state solvency, further increasing the risk premium demanded by bond markets.

The response involved aggressive interventions at the European level to preserve the single currency. The ECB, under President Mario Draghi, initiated its Securities Markets Programme to purchase Spanish and Italian bonds, providing temporary relief. More definitively, in mid-2012, Draghi's famous "whatever it takes" pledge marked a turning point, preceding the announcement of the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) program. While Spain ultimately requested and received a €100 billion European bailout specifically for its banking sector in June 2012, it avoided a full sovereign bailout. These actions, combined with stringent domestic austerity and structural reforms, ultimately calmed the markets and preserved Spain's place within the Euro, though at a high social cost of prolonged economic hardship.

Series: UNESCO World Heritage

2½ Euro obverse
2½ Euro reverse
2½ Euro
2010
2½ Euro obverse
2½ Euro reverse
2½ Euro
2010
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2011
50000 Won obverse
50000 Won reverse
50000 Won
2011
10 Euro obverse
10 Euro reverse
10 Euro
2011
5 Euro obverse
5 Euro reverse
5 Euro
2011
50 Euro obverse
50 Euro reverse
50 Euro
2011

Series: Spain 2 euro commemoratives

2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2007
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2009
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2010
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2011
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2013
🌱 Very Common