New 拢2 coin released to remember D-Day
- Published
A very special 拢2 coin has been revealed to honour 75 years since the historic D鈥怐ay landings.
The Royal Mint - which makes and distributes the coins - made the announcement earlier.
The D-Day landings happened in 1944, during WWII. It was the biggest invasion by sea in history and is a key date in the story of the Second World War.
The coin is inspired by military maps, and depicts the enormous scale of the D-Day landings and what was known as Operation Overlord.
It's not going to go into circulation - so you won't be given one in change at the shops, or be able to get one at the bank. Instead the Royal Mint is selling them on its website.
It comes in 4 different colours and can even come in a posh box for any coin collectors out there.
The commemorative 拢2 coin was designed by The Royal Mint's graphic designer, Stephen Taylor. It's designed to pay tribute to all of the Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen who took part in the huge operation to land on five Normandy beaches.
Nicola Howell is one of the directors at The Royal Mint. She said: "The D鈥怐ay landings is one of the most significant events in our nation's history, and it's important that we remember the instrumental impact that the landings had on the outcome of the Second World War.
75 years on, our commemorative 拢2 coin is a fitting tribute to the significance and scale of the operation, and is an important recognition of the bravery of those that made D鈥怐ay possible."
A donation from every D-Day coin purchased from The Royal Mint goes to the Imperial War Museum to help them continue their important work.
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