Skip to content
Precious Metals Data Aggregator
Loading market data...

10 Euro Silver Violet Coin P

Material
Silver
Category
Coins
Fineness (‰)
0.92500
Mass (g)
16.820
Premium (%)
Unknown
Price
Unknown
Dealer
Muenze Oesterreich
Dealer country
Unknown
Last price update
Unknown
Last seen
Unknown
Available until
Capsule size (mm)
Coin design
Core
Delivery
Denomination
Depth (%)
Details
Diameter (mm)
Dimensions
Edge
Engraver
Extra property
Extra property
Extra property
Face value
Fine weight (g)
Finish
Fluorescence
Grade
Grader
Guard
Has certificate
Heads
Inner Pack Qty
In stock
In stock quantity
Insurance
Is deliverable
Is for delivery only
Is IRA eligible
Is LSP
Is numbered ingot
Issue date
Is under seal
Keywords
Main base metal
Mintage
Mintage proof
Mintage special uncirculated
Mintage uncirculated
Minting year(s)
Mint mark
Numista ID
Occasion
Outer Pack Qty
Package dimensions
Packaging
Producer
Proportions
Purity
Quality
Ring
Series
Shipping
SKU
Symmetry
Table (%)
Tails
Taxation
Theme
Thickness (mm)
Product country
Safe location

A delicate little flower with a strong character, the violet signifies faithfulness, loyalty and constancy in the language of flowers and has long been given as a token of love. Like all the coins in *The Language of Flowers* series, the final coin features an imprint of real flowers that captures violets in their natural state and is faithful to the tiniest detail. With heart-shaped leaves and tiny, sweetly scented flowers that bloom from late winter to early spring, the violet is sometimes referred to as the ‘flower of modesty’ for the way its flowers hide coyly beneath the plant’s heart-shaped leaves. The association between the colour violet and the bluish-purple colour of the plant is thought to have developed in the late fourteenth century. Although most violets do come in shades of blue and purple, they can also be white and yellow, with each colour having a slightly different meaning in the language of flowers. Blue violets stand for love and faithfulness; purple violets mean ‘thinking of you’; white violets stand for innocence, purity and chastity; and yellow violets for high worth and goodness. Combined with the violet’s inherent delicacy, flavour and fragrance, its symbolism perhaps makes it the perfect flower to convey a love that is pure and passionate, yet also bashful and measured. But let violets speak for themselves. With them you say: ‘I stand by you, come what may.’ The obverse of *The Violet* coin features a scene of togetherness in which the faces of a young couple are turned towards each other, their eyes closed and their foreheads gently touching, and their hands are clasped together. Both are wearing flowers in their hair. The coin’s reverse shows three fully opened violets and a flower bud, behind them a band of stylised violets. None of the principal flower images in the series is based on a drawing or illustration. The starting point of every coin design is a real flower grown in the garden, which is then pressed using a special technique.