Logo Title
obverse
reverse
INCM

200 Escudos – Portugal

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Moçambique
Portugal
Context
Year: 1998
Issuer: Portugal Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1974)
Currency:
(1911—2001)
Demonetization: 28 February 2002
Total mintage: 500
Material
Diameter: 36 mm
Weight: 31.12 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Palladium
Standard: Silver ounce
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard711c
Numista: #81947
Value
Exchange value: 200 PTE
Inflation-adjusted value: 353.15 PTE

Obverse

Description:
Portuguese coat of arms, date, and name above. Below, Triton carries Dione, referencing Camões's *Os Lusíadas*. Value beneath.
Inscription:
REPUBLICA PORTUGUESA

1998

200 ESC

Pd 10
Translation:
Portuguese Republic

1998

200 Escudos

Pd 10
Script: Latin
Language: Portuguese
Engraver: Eloísa Byrne

Reverse

Description:
Ship sailing left toward Mozambique Island, a Portuguese settlement. Native sailboat to the left. Arrival date below.
Inscription:
MOÇAMBIQUE

1 DE MARCO

1498
Translation:
Mozambique

1st of March

1498
Script: Latin
Language: Portuguese
Engraver: Eloísa Byrne

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1998INCM500Proof

Historical background

In 1998, Portugal's currency situation was defined by its pivotal and final year operating the escudo (PTE) as a national currency before the historic launch of the euro. The country was deeply embedded in the process of European Monetary Union (EMU), having successfully met the strict convergence criteria—including low inflation, sound public finances, and exchange rate stability—to qualify for the first wave of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) participants. The escudo was irrevocably locked to the new European currency, the euro, at a fixed conversion rate of 200.482 escudos to 1 euro, a parity established in May 1998 that governed all financial transactions and accounting.

This period was one of intense technical and logistical preparation, often termed the "transitional phase." While the escudo remained the physical medium of exchange for the public, all financial and banking systems operated on a "no compulsion, no prohibition" basis, meaning accounting could be done in both euros and escudos. The government, central bank (Banco de Portugal), and financial institutions worked to ensure a smooth changeover, recalibrating systems, minting new euro coins (with Portuguese designs), and printing banknotes in secrecy, while also running public information campaigns to familiarize citizens with the new currency.

The overarching context was one of strategic national and economic alignment with core Europe, symbolizing Portugal's modern integration and stability after decades of isolation under the Estado Novo regime. Adopting the euro was seen as a crowning achievement of this post-1974 democratic period, promising to lower transaction costs, eliminate exchange rate risk with major trading partners, and cement low inflation. Thus, the 1998 currency landscape was fundamentally transitional, characterized by a fixed and stable escudo functioning as a legal subunit of the soon-to-be-physical euro, marking the quiet end of a national monetary history dating back to 1911.

Series: IX Portuguese Discoveries Series

200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1998
Legendary