This coin is from Greece - what you are reading as "eaahnikh hmokpatia" is actually the Greek words "ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΕΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ" which are pronounced "(H)ellenik(eh) Democratia" and mean "(the) Greek Democracy".
This coin is from Greece - what you are reading as "eaahnikh hmokpatia" is actually the Greek words "ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΕΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ" which are pronounced "(H)ellenik(eh) Democratia" and mean "(the) Greek Democracy". To value the coin, you would need to know its year, denomination and condition.
This coin is from Greece - what you are reading as "eaahnikh" is actually the Greek words "ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΕΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ" which are pronounced "(H)ellenik(eh) Democratia" and mean "(the) Greek Democracy". To value the coin, you would need to know its denomination and condition.
I believe your coin is from Bulgaria.
The coin usually has the name of the country or ruler on it.
That depends on which country the coin is from.
The Two Shilling (or Florin) coin is a British coin. British coins do not have the country name on them. The Two Shilling (or Florin) coin was also issued by a large number of British Empire/Commonwealth countries, but will have the country name on them somewhere.
Centenary of what? What country, what coin, what year?
yugoslavia
Oostenrijk
France.
There's no such thing as an "international coin".If you mean a coin from a country other than the US it's called a foreign coin in every country except the one that issued it.In any case you need to post a more specific question with the coin's denomination and the name of the country it came from.